Background: Some authors have mentioned that intersensory integration is damaged in children with learning disabilities (LDs), and other investigators point to motor control alterations in the same patients. Thus, we decided to study these hypotheses by means of posturographic recordings.
Methods: A highly selected group of 27 children with LDs was compared with 27 children of control group without LDs. Patients and controls were placed on the Equitest equipment platform. Sensory organization tests evaluated different test conditions that systematically vary visual, vestibular, and foot somatosensory cues available to subjects while they attempt to maintain a stable, quiet stance. Movement coordination test involved sudden posterior and anterior translations of the patient support surface.
Results: No significant correlations between scholastics and posturographic performance were observed. No difference in the six conditions and in sensory organization ratios or in visual preference between both groups was disclosed. Motor control test on children with LDs showed significant higher values in latencies in averages of large translations.
Conclusions: Our data suggest that vestibular-visual-somatosensory organization for posture control are not abnormal in children with LDs; instead, motor controls show higher latencies with large translation movements, which suggest abnormal rate and timing precision motor coordination.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0188-4409(02)00397-1 | DOI Listing |
Objective: Aim: To reveal the criteria for effective treatment of this pathology and to compare it with the conventional physical factors.
Patients And Methods: Materials and Methods: The research has been taken on 60 people, A control group (CG), including 30 people, treated with basic therapy and experimental group (EG). including 30 people, treated with the same basic therapy and RSWT once per week for seven consecutive weeks.
J Phys Chem A
January 2025
Center for Satellite Application on Environment, Ministry of Ecology and Environment, Beijing 100094, China.
The edge structures of carbonaceous materials exhibit temperature-dependent behavior on the atomic scale, with variations in the relative ratios of zigzag, reconstructed 5-7 zigzag (ZZ57), and armchair edges observed at different temperatures. Nevertheless, the mechanisms underlying the interconversion of these edge structures and the influence of the surrounding metals remain unclear. This study investigates the reconstruction and reversible transformation processes of ZZ57 edge structures in carbon materials and examines the effects of different metal atoms (Na, K, and Ca) by using density functional theory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Contemp Dent Pract
October 2024
Department of Pedodontics and Preventive Dentistry, Sri Guru Ram Das Institute of Dental Sciences and Research, Sri Amritsar, Punjab, India.
Aim: The objective of the present study is to assess and compare the effectiveness of two different anesthetic agents, namely, 4% articaine and 2% lignocaine, in the extraction of primary molar teeth in children.
Materials And Methods: The study included 25 children requiring bilateral extractions of primary molar, with extraction performed on one side with 4% articaine and the contralateral side extraction with 2% lignocaine at two separate appointments. The anesthetic efficacy was evaluated objectively by assessing pain and the child's behavior at baseline, during injection and during extraction using the sound, eye, and motor (SEM) scale objectively, and subjectively using the faces pain rating scale (FPS).
Front Neurol
January 2025
Department of Neurology, Second Affiliated Hospital of Xuzhou Medical University, Xuzhou, Jiangsu, China.
Objective: To investigate changes of brain functional activity in patients with acute unilateral vestibulopathy (AUVP) using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).
Methods: We studied 32 AUVP patients and 30 healthy controls (HC) who received resting-state fMRI scanning. Methods of voxel-based amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation (ALFF) and seed-based functional connectivity (FC) were adopted to compare the difference in brain function between the two groups.
Open Res Eur
January 2025
Neuromotor Behavior and Exercise, University of Münster, Münster, Germany.
Background And Objectives: This is a protocol for a living systematic review and meta-analysis.This review will assess the effects of state-of-the-art exercise interventions designed to promote functional mobility. Therefore, after identifying all potential interventions, we will use the F.
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