5 results match your criteria: "Biomedical Research Center (CAECIHS-UAI)[Affiliation]"
Front Rehabil Sci
March 2022
Department of Neurology, Center for Neurorehabilitation, Valens, Switzerland.
Various factors, such as fear of falling, postural instability, and altered executive function, contribute to the high risk of falling in Parkinson's disease (PD). Dual-task training is an established method to reduce this risk. Motor-perceptual task combinations typically require a patient to walk while simultaneously engaging in a perceptual task.
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March 2022
Departamento de Neurologia da Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de Sao Paulo, Hospital das Clínicas, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Nervenarzt
October 2022
Klinik für Neurologie, Philipps Universität Marburg, Marburg, Deutschland.
Background: Chronic pain is a common non-motor symptom in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD).
Aim: To facilitate the diagnosis of pain in PD, we developed a new classification system the Parkinson's disease pain classification system (PD-PCS) and translated the corresponding validated questionnaire into German.
Methods: A causal relationship of the respective pain syndrome with PD can be determined by four questions before assigning it hierarchically into one of three pain categories (neuropathic, nociceptive and nociplastic).
Drugs Aging
July 2021
LIM 62, Biomedical Research Center (CAECIHS-UAI), National Research Council (CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Pain is a frequent and disabling non-motor feature of Parkinson's disease (PD). The recently proposed PD Pain Classification System (PD-PCS) allows for an association of pain with PD to be determined before being allocated to the main pain mechanism (i.e.
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April 2021
Pain Center, LIM-62, Departamento de Neurologia da Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de Sao Paulo, Hospital das Clínicas, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Pain is a common nonmotor symptom in patients with Parkinson disease (PD) but the correct diagnosis of the respective cause remains difficult because suitable tools are lacking, so far. We developed a framework to differentiate PD- from non-PD-related pain and classify PD-related pain into 3 groups based on validated mechanistic pain descriptors (nociceptive, neuropathic, or nociplastic), which encompass all the previously described PD pain types. Severity of PD-related pain syndromes was scored by ratings of intensity, frequency, and interference with daily living activities.
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