Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd
January 2021
Reconstruction of arm and hand function in patients with a cervical spinal cord injury can improve their quality of life. Elbow extension, wrist extension, grip function and opening of the hand can be reconstructed. Traditionally, this has been done through tendon transpositions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article is a summary of the revised Dutch multidisciplinary evidence-based guideline 'Spinal metastases' (English translation available at: https://www.oncoline.nl/spinal-metastases) that was published at the end of 2015.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: The Multiple Sclerosis Intimacy and Sexuality Questionnaire (MSISQ-15) evaluates symptoms of sexual dysfunction in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS). The objective of this study was to provide and validate a Dutch version of the MSISQ-15 in patients with neurological disease such as MS and spinal cord injury (SCI).
Methods: The linguistic validation process of the original English MSISQ-15 into Dutch was performed according to standardized guidelines.
Cancer Treat Rev
September 2018
Here, we describe the development of a Dutch national guideline on metastases and hematological malignancies localized within the spine. The aim was to create a comprehensive guideline focusing on proactive management of these diseases, enabling healthcare professionals to weigh patient perspectives, life expectancy, and expected outcomes to make informed treatment recommendations. A national multidisciplinary panel consisting of clinicians, a nurse, a patient advocate, an epidemiologist, and a methodologist drafted the guideline.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Optimizing the patients' quality of life is one of the main goals in the urological management of spinal cord injury (SCI) patients. In this study we validated the Dutch SF-Qualiveen, a short questionnaire that measures the urinary-specific quality of life, in SCI patients. No such measure is yet available for this patient group.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To assess, for people with subacute spinal cord injury, if rehabilitation that is reinforced with the addition of a behavioral intervention to promote physical activity leads to a better health, participation and quality of life.
Design: Randomized controlled trial.
Setting: Rehabilitation centers.
Objective: In order to unravel the working mechanisms that underlie the effectiveness of a behavioural intervention promoting physical activity in persons with subacute spinal cord injury, the aim of this study was to assess the mediating effects of physical and psychosocial factors on the intervention effect on physical activity.
Design: Randomized controlled trial.
Setting: Four rehabilitation centres in the Netherlands.
Background: Since physical activity and exercise levels are known to be generally low in persons with spinal cord injury (SCI), there seems to be a need for intervention. Exercise self-efficacy (ESE), the confidence persons have in their ability to be physically active and exercise, is an important and modifiable predictor of physical behavior. The goal of this study was to 1) describe ESE in persons with subacute SCI, 2) to assess ESE in subgroups based on demographic and lesion characteristics, and 3) to explore the relation between ESE and physical behavior and physical capacity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To assess the longitudinal association between respiratory muscle strength and cough capacity in persons with recent spinal cord injury.
Design: Longitudinal analyses.
Subjects: Forty persons with recent spinal cord injury and impaired pulmonary function.
Objectives: One of the explanations for the difference between health state utilities elicited from patients and the public--often provided but seldom studied--is adaptation. The influence of adaptation on utilities was investigated in patients with spinal cord injury.
Methods: Interviews were held at 3 time points (T1, after admission to the rehabilitation center; T2, during active rehabilitation; T3, at least half a year after discharge).
Objective: To clarify relationships between activities, participation, mental health, and life satisfaction in persons with spinal cord injury (SCI) and specify how personal factors (self-efficacy, neuroticism, appraisals) interact with these components. We hypothesized that (1) activities are related directly to participation, participation is related directly to mental health and life satisfaction, and mental health and life satisfaction are 2 interrelated outcome variables; and (2) appraisals are mediators between participation and mental health and life satisfaction, and self-efficacy and neuroticism are related directly to mental health and life satisfaction and indirectly through appraisals.
Design: Follow-up measurement of a multicenter prospective cohort study 5 years after discharge from inpatient rehabilitation.
Objective: To investigate the prevalence of overweight/obesity and the course of the body mass index (BMI) in persons with spinal cord injury during and after inpatient rehabilitation.
Design: Multi-centre longitudinal study.
Subjects: A total of 184 persons with spinal cord injury.
Two patients, a 23-year-old and a 70-year-old man, were admitted to a hospital with a spinal cord lesion. During their stay they developed severe decubitus ulcers which was not noticed until after they were moved to our rehabilitation centre. Despite conventional wound therapy one of the two patients developed an infection deriving from the necrotic decubitus wound which resulted in severe sepsis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To determine changes in functional independence following spinal cord injury and to evaluate the association between functional independence and physical capacity.
Design: Multi-centre prospective cohort study.
Subjects: Patients with spinal cord injury admitted for initial rehabilitation.
Objectives: To assess the change over time in the physical activity level after a spinal cord injury (SCI), to explore its determinants, and to compare the physical activity level 1 year after discharge from the rehabilitation center with the level in able-bodied persons.
Design: Prospective cohort study. Measurements were obtained at the start of active rehabilitation, 3 months later, at discharge, 2 months after discharge, and 1 year after discharge.
Objective: To determine the most important barriers to and facilitators of the level of everyday physical activity in persons with a spinal cord injury after discharge from the rehabilitation centre.
Design: Qualitative study with both cross-sectional and retrospective questions.
Subjects: Thirty-two persons with a spinal cord injury.
Objective: To develop prognostic models for physical capacity at discharge and 1 year after discharge from inpatient rehabilitation in persons with spinal cord injury (SCI).
Design: Inception cohort; data collected at start of rehabilitation (n=104), at discharge (n=81), and 1 year later (n=74).
Setting: Eight Dutch rehabilitation centers.
Objective: To assess the occurrence and risk factors for complications following spinal cord injury during and after inpatient rehabilitation.
Design: Multicentre longitudinal study.
Subjects: A total of 212 persons with a spinal cord injury admitted to specialized rehabilitation centres.
Objective: To assess changes in physical capacity and its determinants in persons with a spinal cord injury.
Design: Prospective cohort study. Measurements at the start of active rehabilitation (t1), 3 months later (t2), at discharge (t3), and 1 year after discharge (t4).