Publications by authors named "Solzi P"

Purpose: The purpose of the study was to determine whether mechanical nerve root compression could indirectly contribute to early muscle fatigue because of impaired activation.

Method: The patients' two legs and the control group's dominant leg were subjected to exhausting foot dorsiflexion against 2 kg weight. Electrophysiological parameters were measured under three conditions: before, upon completion of, and five minutes after the exhausting effort (i.

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Cervical spine movements in 38 severe hemiparetic patients were measured, at least 6 months after the breakout of the first and unique cerebral vascular accident. The purpose was to investigate if there was any difference in maximal head rotation and lateral bending movements between the plegic and the sound side. The measurements were taken by a spherical compass attached to a cubic protractor with a small mobile ball inside, both fixed to the patient's head.

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Patients with hemispheric lesions frequently suffer from equilibrium impairment that may be prolonged and may interfere with rehabilitation. In an effort to clarify whether this phenomenon is related to vestibular dysfunction, we examined the relationship of the horizontal vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) with stability in 15 patients with unilateral hemispheric stroke. The study included electro-oculographic recording of the VOR while the patients were rotated in a vestibular chair.

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Saccadic characteristics were examined in 15 patients with unilateral hemispheric stroke. Eye movements were measured by a standard electro-oculogram technique. In patients with cortical infarcts, mean gain values were lower than in the control subjects for eye movements directed away from the infarct (contralateral), but higher for eye movements towards the infarct (ipsilateral) (p < 0.

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Background And Purpose: The aim of this study was to determine the predictive yield of upper limb short latency somatosensory evoked potential (USEP) in patients with first stroke in the dominant hemisphere.

Methods: Nineteen patients (average age, 58 years) were evaluated twice: on arrival at the rehabilitation center, approximately 3 weeks after the stroke, and again approximately 10 weeks later. The clinical assessment included a quantitative evaluation of motor ability, independence in activities of daily living, and communication ability.

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This study examined vestibular function following hemispheric ischemic strokes, by testing the suppression of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR). Fifteen patients with cortical or subcortical infarcts several months after a unilateral hemispheric stroke were compared with control subjects. The results indicated impairment of VOR suppression in patients with cortical infarcts.

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A follow up study is reported of 100 consecutive unconscious patients admitted to an intensive care coma facility with a history of 30 days or more of unconsciousness of nontraumatic cause. Twenty recovered consciousness, all within 5 months of injury. 31 of the remaining patients died within 6 months following injury, while 49 continued unconscious until death.

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Symptomatic postprandial decrease in blood pressure has been described in patients with various autonomic disorders, but not in patients with spinal injuries. Presented herein is a 31 year old female patient with traumatic complete paraplegia under the T3 level, in whom postprandial hypotension (PPH) was observed. The PPH was preceded by an increase in insulin level and was followed by an acceleration of heart rate.

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The present work examined the relationship between the appearance of periarticular new bone formation (PNBF) and the presence of local sensorimotor disability, and the relationship between PNBF and the severity of the motor disability. The study population consisted of 18 patients with spinal cord lesions and 18 patients with traumatic brain injury. The confinement of PNBF below the level of neurological deficit in patients with spinal cord lesions, and mainly to paralysed or paretic limbs in brain injured patients, indicates a possible causal relationship between the presence of sensorimotor disability and PNBF.

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The efficacy of rehabilitation programs to facilitate recovery after acute stroke remains controversial. To further evaluate this issue, the records of 139 "middle-band" stroke survivors were reviewed retrospectively at admission to, discharge from, and one-year follow-up from inpatient rehabilitation. Patients were divided into two groups (out-patient [O/P] or no O/P) based on their involvement in physical and occupational therapy services.

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Sleep patterns were evaluated in a case of 'locked-in' syndrome. This patient had an ischemic infarction involving the ventral portion of the upper half of the pons bilaterally, with a posteromedial extension into the tegmentum. Reticular structures, notably the median raphe nuclei, supposed to play a major regulatory role in sleep, were most probably involved.

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A right-handed man developed stuttering, without aphasia, as a result of a circumscribed subcortical infarction in the right hemisphere. He never stuttered before and has no family history of stuttering. Damage to callosal pathways coordinating the activity of both hemispheres during speech is proposed as a possible explanation for the stuttering.

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Bilateral force measurements on the supporting limbs in postural sway while standing still were made to evaluate post-cerebral-vascular accident (CVA) patients during rehabilitation. Normal subjects of the same age group were tested as controls. From the force tracings obtained, three oscillation frequencies were identified, with orders of magnitudes of 7, 1 and 0.

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Monocular eye-sighting preference was examined in 32 children with hemiplegia, 51 adult-onset hemiplegic patients and 57 normal children and adults. Eye preference was compared with ear preference on dichotic listening for 25 of the hemiplegic children. No independent association could be detected between eye preference and ear preference.

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Mutism following brain trauma is quite common, is usually transient, and recovery of speech is essentially the rule. Lasting total absence of speech without aphasia is highly unusual. Three such patients, two of traumatic and one due to vascular origin showing buccofacial apraxia (BFA) and computerized tomography (CT) evidence of bilateral frontal lesions are reported.

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Blink reflex (BR) was examined serially in patients 1, 2 and 3 months after unilateral hemispheric cerebrovascular accident and compared with functional state and CT findings of lesion extent and location. BR R2 components were depressed and correlated with lesion size. Initial walking ability was correlated with latency and amplitude of both direct and consensual R2 elicited by stimulation of the paretic side.

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A new procedural version of the Willeford competing sentences test (Willeford. Audiol Hear Educ 1976;2:12-20) is introduced here for use with brain damaged patients. The threshold-of-interference test seeks the minimal level of the competing sentences at which the patient can no longer repeat the message at the test ear.

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Two groups of brain damaged adults, those with cerebrocranial injury (CCI) and victims of cerebrovascular accident (CVA) were tested with the competing sentences test of Willeford (In: Central Auditory Dysfunction. New York: Grune and Stratton, 1977: Chap 2). The main purpose was the exposure of functional disorders of communication in such patients who test within normal or near-normal limits on routine audiological testing and also on tests for aphasia.

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Repeated cystometry was performed in 17 patients after a cerebrovascular accident. Cranial computerised tomography (CT) was performed in all patients. In this series, urinary continence showed a significant correlation both with cystometric bladder tone and with the CT brain findings.

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In 80 upper extremities clinically suspected of carpal tunnel syndrome, electromyography (EMG) was performed and the Phalen and Tinel signs were sought. These two signs showed relatively low sensitivity (60-67%) and specificity (59-77%) despite a statistically significant association with the EMG findings. These two signs are not reliable as clinical criteria for carpal tunnel syndrome.

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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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