Publications by authors named "Najenson T"

The notched-noise procedure of Patterson (1974, Journal of the Accoustical Society of America, 55, 802-809; 1976, Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 59, 640-654) was employed in revealing changes in auditory frequency selectivity (FS) in noise-exposed industrial workers in manufacturing plants in which noise levels in the working environment exceeded 90 dB(A). With 4 kHz as the test frequency, both threshold and FS measures were applied to three groups of non-exposed young adults (total N = 61) for reference values and to workers in three different factories, some ('noise-exposed') working in noise levels over 90 dB(A) (total N = 222). In another study involving 185 workers only the FS test was repeated after a work session, and the results are reported on 31 who worked in high noise levels.

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Cigarette smoking has an effect on platelet function and aggregation although the sensitivity of platelet count in reflecting this phenomenon is not known. The association of platelet count with smoking habits was examined in a cohort of 5017 Israeli industrial workers aged 20-64 years. Males had a significantly lower age-adjusted mean platelet count than females (225,600 vs 247,800/microliters; p less than 0.

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Studies on the effects of long-term exposure to industrial noise on resting blood pressure have yielded inconsistent results. Ambulatory blood pressure and heart rate were monitored simultaneously with noise exposure in normotensive male industrial workers in Israel (85 aged 25 to 44 and 77 aged 45 to 65 years). In the younger group, average ambulatory systolic blood pressure was 3.

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This study was designed to evaluate the association of a single, integrated measure of simultaneous exposure to a number of adverse work and environmental conditions, termed the Ergonomic Stress Level (E-S-L), on workers' accident and sickness absence rates. The factors determining the E-S-L were body motion and posture, physical effort, active hazards and environmental stressors. E-S-L evaluation was based on 'walk-through' hazard inventories, direct observations, measurements and interviews.

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Tapping responses were recorded in a group of patients who sustained lesions from cerebrovascular accidents and from an age-matched group of healthy subjects. In each experiment the stimuli were an auditory signal, a flash, or a light touch on the arm, delivered either at random intervals or at fixed time intervals of 1, 2, 3, or 4 s. The tapping response was done with each hand separately (first experiment) or with each hand alternately (second experiment).

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A neurologic and neuropsychologic test battery was administered to a sample of 35 children drawn from all those in a defined geographic area who had been hospitalized for head trauma before age 7 during the years 1970-1976. Examination was performed 3 1/2 to 10 years after injury, at age 6-15. Twelve subjects had been diagnosed at the time of injury as suffering moderate insult and had been referred to the metropolitan neurosurgical center, while twenty-three with only mild injury had been retained for observation in a local pediatric ward.

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Systematic methods for optimizing the fitting and alignment of artificial legs were developed in this study. The procedures were based on gait analysis and included the following aspects: stump-prosthesis interface or socket geometry, the selection of components from which the artificial leg was constructed, and dynamic alignment of the prosthesis. The amputee's adaptation to deliberately imposed perturbations in his prosthesis, and the resulting compensatory mechanisms are also discussed.

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Four paraplegic patients with traumatic upper motor neuron lesions at the spinal levels between D5 and D12 were activated by functional electrical stimulation (FES) and evaluated biomechanically and physiologically. After a training program aimed at strengthening the muscles of the lower legs, the patients were able to stand up, maintain the standing position, and walk for short distances while being supported. Biomechanical evaluation included weight bearing on the patients' own legs during standing as measured on a force platform and analysis of the time-distance parameters of the stride during walking as measured on a walkway.

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A training method for the activation of the lower limb muscles of paraplegics by functional electrical stimulation (FES) for standing and walking is described. It consists of a daily program which does not interfere with the normal routine of the patient. The treatment of four patients, paralysed form 7 to 30 years, is described.

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In this study, the aim was to evaluate the influence on the cardiopulmonary system of muscular contractions of the paralyzed limbs in paraplegia, activated by FES during treatment, and the energy cost of standing and walking while using FES as an orthotic aid. Three traumatic spastic paraplegics were selected for the measurements. At the end of a 6 month training program heart rate and oxygen consumption of the patients were evaluated as follows: at rest; following 30 minutes of FES in the sitting position; following 15 minutes of standing; and during ambulation.

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Tests of central auditory function were performed variously on 64 patients with hemiplegia who had suffered a single stroke but with minimal or no aphasia symptoms and with essentially normal hearing. Both right and left hemisphere lesions were represented for comparison of effects on the tests. Reports of central auditory dysfunction generally assume localization in the temporal lobes.

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A follow-up study conducted among brain-injured patients explored the correlation between attention capacity limitation and psychiatric parameters as well as their impact on work involvement, two years after hospitalization. Capacity limitation was identified as difficulties in dual-task performance which requires simultaneous attention and response to two sources of stimulation. Poor performance on one or both tasks included in the dual-task paradigm (pursuit motor tracking task and a verbal task) was correlated with psychiatric parameters of behavior, personality and thought.

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Clinical observations have shown that brain-injured patients perform poorly in tasks requiring attention. While selective and sustained attention has been extensively investigated, there is little systematic information on how brain-injured patients perform on divided attention tasks requiring simultaneous handling of and responding to two sources of information. This study was designed to analyse the behavior of hospitalized brain-injured patients as compared with matched normal controls in performing a dual task consisting of pursuit motor tracking coupled with delayed digit recall (DDR).

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A multi-stage follow-up project is in progress at the Loewenstein Rehabilitation Hospital. In the first stage, a group of 153 patients was examined while in the acute phase of CVA (1 to 5 days from stroke), and again 6 months later, by a physician, a physiotherapist and an occupational therapist. Medical, demographical and functional profiles were determined.

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A new system for comprehensive disability evaluation has been developed in the framework of our Hospital. This system is based on multidisciplinary evaluation during one day of tests and the summarization of the data collected. The process takes place at the Institute for Functional Evaluation, a joint project of the National Insurance Institute and the Loewenstein Hospital in Israel.

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A follow-up study of 40 hemiplegic patients two years after discharge from hospital was aimed at (a) identifying variables capable of predicting general functional ability in everyday life (work, home, family and social life) and (b) examining the relationship between levels of functioning and subjective evaluation of their rehabilitation state. The results showed that a composite measure of functioning ability was closely related to self-reports of satisfaction in significant areas of life: physical well-being, emotional security, satisfaction of family and social needs and vocational self-actualization. The best objective predictor of overall domestic and outdoor functioning was the primary ADL (eating, dressing, bathing, etc.

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The purpose of this study was to determine the relation between geometry of the patellar tendon (PT) insertion in the socket and the dynamic load transmitted through the PT, in a patellar tendon bearing (PTB) prosthesis. The dynamic load was measured by a specially constructed two-component load cell, which was mounted on the experimental prosthesis. Geometry of the PT insertion relative to the socket was altered by adjusting the location of the mounting frame-load cell assembly.

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A major advantage of internal fixation of intertrochanteric fractures is that it can normally be followed by early and fast rehabilitation of the patient, finding expression in weight bearing and locomotion abilities of the patients. Complications which nevertheless occur, are mostly of mechanical origin. The purpose of our study was to evaluate the biomechanical performance of rehabilitated patients treated with four different types of nail-plates.

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A comprehensive system for evaluating the earning capacity of disability benefit claimants was developed. It is based on theoretical considerations of the factors constituting the loss of such capacity, and involves assessments made by a multi-disciplinary team (including at least a rehabilitation physician, registered nurse, psychologist and a social worker). Each team member conducts an assessment by means of a questionnaire with a strong emphasis on the claimant's functional capacity.

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Systematic attempts were made to elicit the snout, palmomental and corneomandibular reflexes in 50 young patients with prolonged traumatic coma, 50 elderly hemiplegics soon after their first cerebrovascular accident and in 100 normal age-matched controls. None was found significantly more frequently alone in brain-damaged patients than in age-matched controls. Only combinations of two or three reflexes showed diagnostic value in distinguishing between neurologically damaged patients and normal age-matched controls.

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Scanning 3000 cases admitted for rehabilitation after cerebrovascular accident over a 20 year period produced a sample of 1369 subjects, without age restrictions, admitted within six months of a first stroke of thrombotic etiology. In this sample, survival rates showed no significant difference between men and women. Age at onset, however, clearly influenced survival changes; the expected mean survival was 6 years at 40 and 2 at age 80; average loss of life was 14 years for the whole sample, meaning a vital prognosis two to three times worse than that of the general population.

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In eight patients (six males and two females) hospitalized for prolonged coma (164-1320 days; five patients were in traumatic coma, two after cardiac arrest during surgery, and one after a venomous scorpion sting), diurnal variation of cortisol secretion, human (L) GH, PRL, TSH secretion as well as the release of the pituitary hormones after TRH and L-dopa stimulation were assessed. Serum T4 cortisol, hGH, hPRL, and hTSH levels were normal. The cortisol diurnal variation was preserved in six patients.

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Results are reported of a regional survey of hospitalized head injuries in Israeli children aged 0-7 years during the period 1970-1976. There were 370 such cases surveyed. Incidence of head injury requiring hospitalization was 1.

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In an attempt to examine the relationship between growth hormone (GH) and periarticular new bone formation (PNBF), we studied eight patients with brain lesions of different origins who were in a prolonged comatose state for 164 to 1320 days. Five of them developed PNBF. The latter reacted to both the specific L-Dopa test and to the non-specific TRH test with an increase in GH serum concentration.

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