Purpose: In children with cerebral palsy (CP), with impaired trunk control and toe-walking, trunk-focused rehabilitation (TFR) based on postural activities was hypothesized to improve trunk postural control, early trunk deceleration, and ankle dorsiflexion braking during walking. Methods: Seventeen children with CP (5-12 years) walking autonomously were randomly assigned to TFR and then usual rehabilitation (TFR-UR) or vice versa (UR-TFR).
Results: Only after TFR was significant improvements in (i) the Trunk Control Measurement Scale score, postural sway on an unstable sitting device and standing, and (ii) early sternal and sacral decelerations and coupled negative ankle power due to plantar flexors.
Objective: To assess the effectiveness of intra-articular injection of bone marrow concentrate (BMC) under ultrasound (US) guidance in the treatment of patellofemoral osteoarthritis (OA), with clinical and volumetric magnetic resonance (MR) imaging follow-up.
Methods: This retrospective study included 96 consecutive patients referred for US-guided intra-articular injection of BMC for symptomatic patellofemoral OA for which conservative treatment had failed. A control group of 21 patients with symptomatic patellofemoral OA was included for comparison.
Background: Gastric pneumatosis (GP) is a rare radiologic finding with an unpredictable prognosis. The aim of this study was to identify mortality risk factors from patients presenting with GP on computed tomography (CT), and to develop a model which would allow us to predict which patients would benefit most from operative management.
Methods: Between 2010 and 2020, all CT-scan reports in four tertiary centers were searched for the following terms: "gastric pneumatosis," "intramural gastric air" or "emphysematous gastritis.
Introduction: The tip-apex distance (TAD) is the only predictor for mechanical failure after internal fixation of trochanteric fractures. The main objective of our study was to assess whether the intraoperative visual estimation of the TAD concurred with the measurement taken on postoperative digital X-rays. We hypothesized that there was a good concordance between these 2 different methods of measurement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Sensorimotor control of axial segments, which develops during childhood and is not mature until adolescence, is essential for the development of balance control during motor activities. Children with cerebral palsy (CP) have deficits in postural control when standing or walking, including less stabilization of the head and trunk which could affect postural control.
Research Question: Is dynamic stabilization of axial segments during an unstable sitting task deficient in children with CP compared to typically developing children? Is this deficit correlated with the deficit of postural control during standing?
Method: Seventeen children with CP (GMFCS I-II) and 17 typically-developing children from 6 to 12 years old were rated on the Trunk Control Measurement Scale (TCMS).
Among the techniques used to reduce spatial neglect's symptoms, left neck muscle vibration (NMV) is alluring because it does not require the patient's attentional co-operation. The aim of this study was to determine the type of NMV-associated feedback that induced the most intense and longest-lasting egocentric post-effects. Eighty-seven healthy individuals were randomly assigned to four intervention groups: "neck muscle vibration, blindfolded" (NMV), "neck muscle vibration with vision" (NMV + V), "neck muscle vibration and visual finger-pointing" (NMV + P), and "visual finger-pointing" (P).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPostural control continues to develop during middle childhood as shown by the decrease in body sway in stance between the ages of 5 and 11. Although head and trunk control is crucial for balance control during both static and dynamic activities, evaluating its specific development and its contribution to overall postural control is methodologically challenging. Here, we used an unstable sitting device adapted to ensure that only the axial segments could control the balance of the device and thus the balance of the upper body.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Seven years of age is a milestone for learning basic knowledge that is strongly related to attention abilities such as Alerting, Orienting, and Inhibition function, allowing for appropriate adaptation to primary school. These attention abilities are also influenced by gestational age at birth in a complex manner, indicating an area of weakness in prematurely born children. Furthermore, recent studies suggest that allowing children to have freedom of movement during learning may improve their attention level and school performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMuscle-tendon vibration has often been used to study the contribution of proprioception to kinesthesia and postural control. This technique is known to simulate the lengthening of the vibrated muscle and, in the presence of balance constraints, evoke compensatory postural responses. The objective of the present study was to clarify the consequences of this stimulation on the dynamic features of whole-body movement perception in upright stance and in the absence of balance constraints.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: The executive committee of the European Society for the clinical evaluation of balance disorders meets annually to address equilibrium problems that are not well understood. This is a review paper on discussions in the latest meeting we held.
Materials And Methods: Seeing patients with vestibular disorders who end up depending on visual information as part of their compensation process is a common clinical occurrence.
Purpose: Beyond promising experimental results of sensory passive stimulations in spatial cognition disorders, some questions still remain regarding interests of these stimulations during the daily activities in neglect. The aim of this case-study was to evaluate the effects of a protocol combining left neck-muscle vibration with daily simple movements, like arm pointing movements, on perceptivo-locomotor deficits in a left spatial neglect patient.
Materials And Methods: Two neuropsychological tests, one subjective straight-ahead pointing (SSA) test and one wheelchair navigation test were carried out before the combination protocol, immediately after, 1 h later, and 24 h later.
The aim of this study was to assess the visuo-oculomotor skills of gaze orientation in selected sport activities relative to visual demands of the sporting environment. Both temporal and spatial demands of the sporting environment were investigated: The latency and accuracy of horizontal saccades and the gain of the horizontal smooth pursuit of the sporting environment were investigated in 16 fencers, 19 tennis players, 12 gymnasts, 9 swimmers and 18 sedentary participants. For the saccade test, two sequences were tested: In the fixed sequence, participants knew in advance the time interval between each target, as well as the direction and the amplitude of its reappearance; in the Freyss sequence however, the spatial changes of the target (direction and amplitude) were known in advance by participants but the time interval between each target was unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn many daily situations, balance control is associated with a cognitive activity such as reading or a simple calculation. The objective of this study was to investigate the relationship between these two specific human activities, especially the influence of visual cues and support surface stability on body sway during a calculation task. A Sensory Organization Test, which can disrupt or suppress sensory inputs, was performed on 71 healthy young adults.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Psychol (Amst)
March 2011
In the absence of visual supervision, tilting the head sideways gives rise to deviations in spatially defined arm movements. The purpose of this study was to determine whether these deviations are restricted to situations with impoverished visual information. Two experiments were conducted in which participants were positioned supine and reproduced with their unseen index finger a 2 dimensional figure either under visual supervision or from memory (eyes closed).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn response to repetitive proprioceptive disturbances (vibration) applied to postural muscles, the evoked response has been shown to decrease in amplitude within the first few trials. The present experiment investigated whether this attenuation of the response to vibration stimulation (90Hz, 5s) was muscle specific or would be transferred to the antagonist muscles. Sixteen participants stood upright with eyes closed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe described experiment investigated whether adaptation to successive Achilles tendon vibration depends on the postural challenge. In phase 1, thirty-six participants were divided into three groups, each with a different postural challenge. After being blindfolded, participants received 15 trials of Achilles tendon vibration (10 s-90 Hz) while standing upright in either a free-standing condition (FS group), a light finger touch condition (LFT group), or a restrained-standing condition (RS group) in which a dorsal stand prevented body displacement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent experiments have shown that the vestibular channel of balance control differs fundamentally from the visual channel. Whereas the response to a visual perturbation can be suppressed if the subject has awareness that an upcoming disturbance is likely to be caused by an external agent rather than by self-motion, a similar assumption cannot be made concerning the vestibular system. The present experiment investigated whether postural responses evoked by a proprioceptive perturbation (vibration of the Achilles' tendon at 90 Hz for 2.
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