11 results on '"Rééducation"'
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2. [Patient monitoring strategy in a hand surgery university center labeled FESUM-Integration of postgraduate students: A prospective study].
- Author
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Delas F, Tomczak S, Garcia-Doldan CM, Coquerel-Beghin D, Beccari R, Dhellemmes O, and Auquit-Auckbur I
- Subjects
- Humans, Prospective Studies, Male, Female, Adult, Hospitals, University, France, Internship and Residency, Patient Satisfaction, Middle Aged, Hand Injuries surgery
- Abstract
Introduction: Federation of Hand Emergency Services (FESUM) is a European network of hand emergency centers (called SOS hand centers) in France, Belgium and Luxembourg. The FESUM network includes 64 SOS Hand centers in France. In our university hospital, the FESUM-certified SOS hand has been part of the plastic surgery department since 2001. It has included, since 2016, postgraduate students ("residents") training in hand surgery who participate independently in the patient follow-up. The objective of this study was to analyze the characteristics of this population of patients with hand injuries and their satisfaction with this mode of follow-up. The secondary objective was to study the characteristics of the patient population treated by our center., Material and Method: We conducted a study on the follow-up of patients undergoing emergency hand surgery, prospective, single-center, declarative, anonymized, between May and October 2021 at the SOS main center of our university hospital at the "SOS Main" intern consultation. The demographic data, the main characteristics of the pathology, the elements of initial care and follow-up of the patients as well as their satisfaction were analyzed, as well as the satisfaction of the interns., Results: We included 323 patients. The population of patients treated generally corresponded to a young man, manual worker, who was initially treated in an outpatient department or in an SOS Hand consultation. The lesions most often represented were fractures (24%), tendon wounds (18%) and wounds without damage to noble tissues (16%). Follow-up consultations took place mainly 15days after the emergency intervention, lasted on average 10minutes and did not present excessive delays. Patient (91.2%) and post-graduate student (87.2%) satisfaction was high. However, postoperative physiotherapy follow-up was insufficient, as was self-rehabilitation., Conclusion: The integration of post-graduate student in a university plastic surgery department into the care of SOS Hand patients seems beneficial for all those involved, and for their training. The characteristics of the follow-up consultations by the intern in autonomous supervision corresponded to the high quality standards of the FESUM. The patients showed a high satisfaction rate. Better valorization of this consultation in "office surgery" should be considered., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
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3. Our 35 years' experience on postburn heterotopic ossification: A three-step treatment.
- Author
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Malca N, Serror K, Mimoun M, Chatelain S, Kaplan J, Chaouat M, Marco O, and Boccara D
- Subjects
- Adult, Analgesics, Opioid therapeutic use, Female, Humans, Male, Ossification, Heterotopic etiology, Postoperative Care, Recurrence, Retrospective Studies, Burns complications, Burns surgery, Ossification, Heterotopic rehabilitation, Ossification, Heterotopic surgery, Postoperative Complications
- Abstract
Our retrospective study of burn patients presents a three-step treatment of heterotopic ossification: excision surgery, early rehabilitation, and analgesia. We included patients admitted to the department for treatment of postburn heterotopic ossification between January 1, 1979, and September 30, 2015. The mean age at the time of the burn was 43.3 years. Men accounted for the majority of burn patients who developed an osteoma (70.8%). The mean total skin area burned was 38.4%. No osteoma justifying surgery was found for any patient with a total burned skin area less than 19%. The burned zones were related to the osteoma development in 94.3% of cases. On average, the surgery took place 10.8 months after the burn. The osteotomy was accompanied by surgical treatment of a contracture in 37.1% of patients. Most of the osteomata were found at the elbows (30), followed by the shoulders (3), and finally the knees (2). Rehabilitation began on D0 after the surgery, except if a flap or a thin-skin graft was used. Regarding analgesia, opiates were prescribed systematically during the immediate postoperative period. Elbow range of motion on flexion improved by a mean of 84.1°. During the postoperative period, we found 2 recurrences of osteoma and 1 elbow hematoma in two separate patients. There were no postoperative infections or neurological sequelae. Our retrospective French study confirmed results found in the international literature. The three-step treatment - excision surgery, early rehabilitation, and antalgia - seems to be the best means of treating osteoma with satisfactory results. Surgery is indicated only in the case of functional impairment and not simply based on imaging., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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4. [Usefulness of rehabilitation in inflammatory myopathies].
- Author
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Moyon Q and Benveniste O
- Subjects
- Combined Modality Therapy, Decision Making, Exercise, Glucocorticoids therapeutic use, Humans, Mobility Limitation, Myositis classification, Myositis diagnosis, Myositis drug therapy, Physical Therapy Modalities classification, Myositis rehabilitation
- Abstract
Rehabilitation, for a long time not recommended, seems today to hold a prominent place within the therapeutic arsenal of inflammatory myopathies. The difficulty of its evaluation, apart from the low prevalence of these diseases, lies in a triple heterogeneity: first that distinguishing the different forms of inflammatory myopathies and the phase where they are active; second, that concerning the endpoint considered to assess the efficiency of the intervention; lastly, the diversity of the rehabilitation programs that can be undertaken. Between 1993 and 2016, about 30 studies estimating the rehabilitation of inflammatory myopathies have been published, among which five randomized controlled trials, four controlled trials, 15 open studies, and seven case reports. All these studies evidence the safety of rehabilitation and some show a significant improvement of the criteria estimating the activity of the disease, its functional impact or the impairment of quality of life and the limitation in daily life activities triggered by the disease. The rehabilitation, whether aerobic, anaerobic or mixed, must today systematically be associated with the pharmaceutic treatment proposed to patients affected by inflammatory myopathies. Other studies are necessary to optimize the rehabilitation methods, to understand their effects and action, and to quantify their impact and provide more trustworthy evidence., (Copyright © 2016. Published by Elsevier SAS.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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5. Advantages and limitations of virtual reality for balance assessment and rehabilitation.
- Author
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Morel M, Bideau B, Lardy J, and Kulpa R
- Subjects
- Humans, Sensation Disorders etiology, Stroke complications, Postural Balance, Sensation Disorders diagnosis, Sensation Disorders rehabilitation, User-Computer Interface
- Abstract
Virtual reality (VR) is now commonly used in many domains because of its ability to provide a standardized, reproducible and controllable environment. In balance assessment, it can be used to control stimuli presented to patients and thus accurately evaluate their progression or compare them to different populations in standardized situations. In balance rehabilitation, VR allows the creation of new generation tools and at the same time the means to assess the efficiency of each parameter of these tools in order to optimize them. Moreover, with the development of low-cost devices, this rehabilitation can be continued at home, making access to these tools much easier, in addition to their entertaining and thus motivating properties. Nevertheless, and even more with low-cost systems, VR has limits that can alter the results of the studies that use it: the latency of the system (the delay cumulated on each step of the process from data acquisition on the patients to multimodal outputs); and distance perception, which tends to be underestimated in VR. After having described why VR is an essential tool for balance assessment and rehabilitation and illustrated this statement with a case study, this review discusses the previous works in the domain with regards to the technological limits of VR., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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6. Effect of sensorial stimulations on postural disturbances related to spatial cognition disorders after stroke.
- Author
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Bonan I, Chochina L, Moulinet-Raillon A, Leblong E, Jamal K, and Challois-Leplaideur S
- Subjects
- Cognition Disorders etiology, Humans, Orientation, Perceptual Disorders etiology, Sensation Disorders etiology, Treatment Outcome, Cognition Disorders rehabilitation, Perceptual Disorders rehabilitation, Postural Balance, Sensation Disorders rehabilitation, Space Perception, Stroke complications
- Abstract
Balance disorders related to disturbances in perception of spatial reference systems are common especially after right hemispheric stroke. Mental misrepresentation of bodily orientation in space is then often superimposed upon other factors affecting imbalance such as motor and sensory impairments. Traditional rehabilitation for balance recovery has not been specifically designed to improve balance disorders related to spatial cognition. The traditional approach, consisting of stimulating the conscious perception of body orientation in space, is demanding and laborious. The approach based on sensorial stimulation is completely different. The relevance of this method lies in the fact that, firstly it is specifically active in the cognitive component of balance disorders; and secondly, it can passively be applied with minimal patient participation, which is of particular importance for this patient group characterized by disorders of attention and concentration. These techniques, such as proprioceptive, visual or vestibular stimulation, have been found to correct spatial neglect but also postural bias. Clinical and data from functional neuro-imaging suggest a direct central action on cortical structures involved in the elaboration of spatial representation. These are promising techniques for the rehabilitation of postural disturbances related to spatial cognition disorders but are as yet at the stage of preliminary results., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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7. Gait post-stroke: Pathophysiology and rehabilitation strategies.
- Author
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Beyaert C, Vasa R, and Frykberg GE
- Subjects
- Animals, Biomechanical Phenomena, Gait Disorders, Neurologic etiology, Humans, Muscle, Skeletal innervation, Muscle, Skeletal physiopathology, Paresis etiology, Postural Balance, Posture, Recovery of Function, Stroke complications, Walking, Brain physiopathology, Gait Disorders, Neurologic physiopathology, Gait Disorders, Neurologic rehabilitation, Stroke physiopathology, Stroke Rehabilitation
- Abstract
We reviewed neural control and biomechanical description of gait in both non-disabled and post-stroke subjects. In addition, we reviewed most of the gait rehabilitation strategies currently in use or in development and observed their principles in relation to recent pathophysiology of post-stroke gait. In both non-disabled and post-stroke subjects, motor control is organized on a task-oriented basis using a common set of a few muscle modules to simultaneously achieve body support, balance control, and forward progression during gait. Hemiparesis following stroke is due to disruption of descending neural pathways, usually with no direct lesion of the brainstem and cerebellar structures involved in motor automatic processes. Post-stroke, improvements of motor activities including standing and locomotion are variable but are typically characterized by a common postural behaviour which involves the unaffected side more for body support and balance control, likely in response to initial muscle weakness of the affected side. Various rehabilitation strategies are regularly used or in development, targeting muscle activity, postural and gait tasks, using more or less high-technology equipment. Reduced walking speed often improves with time and with various rehabilitation strategies, but asymmetric postural behaviour during standing and walking is often reinforced, maintained, or only transitorily decreased. This asymmetric compensatory postural behaviour appears to be robust, driven by support and balance tasks maintaining the predominant use of the unaffected side over the initially impaired affected side. Based on these elements, stroke rehabilitation including affected muscle strengthening and often stretching would first need to correct the postural asymmetric pattern by exploiting postural automatic processes in various particular motor tasks secondarily beneficial to gait., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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8. Motor strategies of postural control after hemispheric stroke.
- Author
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Tasseel-Ponche S, Yelnik AP, and Bonan IV
- Subjects
- Hemiplegia etiology, Hemiplegia physiopathology, Humans, Sensation Disorders etiology, Weight-Bearing, Postural Balance, Posture, Sensation Disorders physiopathology, Stroke complications, Stroke physiopathology
- Abstract
After stroke, the causes of balance disorders include motor disorders, sensory loss, perceptual deficits and altered spatial cognition. This review focuses on motor strategies for postural control after stroke. Weight-bearing asymmetry, smaller surface of stability, increased sway, body tilting and sometimes pushing syndrome are observed. Weakness and sensory impairments account only for some of these disturbances; altered postural reactions and anticipated postural adjustments as well as abnormal synergistic muscular activation play an important part. These disorders are often linked to cognitive impairments (visuospatial analysis, perception of verticality, use of sensory information, attention, etc.), which explain the preeminent disorders of postural control seen with right rather than left-hemisphere lesions. Most of the motor changes are due to an impaired central nervous system but some could be considered adaptive behaviors. These changes have consequences for rehabilitation and need further studies for building customized programs based on the motor comportment of a given patient., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. [Rehabilitation of facial paralysis].
- Author
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Martin F
- Subjects
- Biofeedback, Psychology, Electromyography, Humans, Nerve Transfer, Physical Therapy Modalities, Temporal Muscle surgery, Facial Paralysis therapy
- Abstract
Rehabilitation takes an important part in the treatment of facial paralysis, especially when these are severe. It aims to lead the recovery of motor activity and prevent or reduce sequelae like synkinesis or spasms. It is preferable that it be proposed early in order to set up a treatment plan based on the results of the assessment, sometimes coupled with an electromyography. In case of surgery, preoperative work is recommended, especially in case of hypoglossofacial anastomosis or lengthening temporalis myoplasty (LTM). Our proposal is to present an original technique to enhance the sensorimotor loop and the cortical control of movement, especially when using botulinum toxin and after surgery., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. [Thigh and leg musculo-cutaneous island flap for giant bilateral trochanteric and perineal pressure sores coverage: Extreme treatment in spinal cord injury].
- Author
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André A, Crouzet C, De Boissezon X, and Grolleau JL
- Subjects
- Hip, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Paraplegia complications, Perineum, Pressure Ulcer etiology, Spinal Cord Injuries complications, Pressure Ulcer surgery, Surgical Flaps
- Abstract
Introduction: Surgical treatment of perineal pressure sores could be done with various fascio-cutaneous or musculo-cutaneous flaps, which provide cover and filling of most of pressure sores after spinal cord injuries. In rare cases, classical solutions are overtaken, then it is necessary to use more complex techniques. We report a case of a made-to-measure lower limb flap for coverage of confluent perineal pressure sores., Patient and Method: A 49-year-old paraplegic patient developed multiple pressure sores on left and right ischial tuberosity, inferior pubic bone and bilateral trochanters with hips dislocation. Surgical treatment involved a whole right thigh flap to cover and fill right side lesions, associated to a posterior right leg musculo-cutaneous island flap to cover and fill the left trochanteric pressure sore., Result: The surgical procedure lasted 6.5 hours and required massive blood transfusion. Antibiotics were adapted to bacteriological samples. There were no postoperative complications; complete wound healing occurred after three weeks., Discussion: A lower limb sacrifice for coverage of a giant perineal pressure sores is an extreme surgical solution, reserved to patients understanding the issues of this last chance procedure. A good knowledge of vascular anatomy is an essential prerequisite, and allows to shape made-to-measure flaps. The success of such a procedure is closely linked to the collaboration with the rehabilitation team (appropriate therapeutic education concerning transfers and positioning)., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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11. Measuring verticality perception after stroke: why and how?
- Author
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Pérennou D, Piscicelli C, Barbieri G, Jaeger M, Marquer A, and Barra J
- Subjects
- Humans, Visual Perception, Postural Balance, Space Perception, Stroke psychology
- Abstract
About 80 papers dealing with verticality after stroke have been published in the last 20years. Here we reviewed the reasons and findings that explain why measuring verticality perception after stroke is interesting. Research on verticality perception after stroke has contributed to improve the knowledge on brain mechanisms, which build up and update a sense of verticality. Preliminary research using modern techniques of brain imaging has shown that the posterior lateral thalamus and the parietal insular cortex are areas of interest for this internal model of verticality. How they interact and are critical remains to be investigated. From a clinical standpoint, it has now been clearly established that biases in verticality perception are frequent after a stroke, causing postural disorders. Measuring the postural vertical with the wheel paradigm has allowed elucidating the mechanisms of lateropulsion, leading or not to a pushing. Schematically, patients with a hemispheric stroke align their erect posture with an erroneous reference of verticality, tilted to the side opposite the lesion. In patients with a brainstem stroke lateropulsion is usually ipsilesional, and results rather from a pathological asymmetry of tone, through vestibulo-spinal mechanisms. These evolutions of concepts and measurement standards of verticality representation should guide the emergence of rehabilitation programs specifically dedicated to the sense of verticality after stroke. Indeed, several pilot studies using appropriate somatosensory stimulation suggest the possibility to recalibrate the internal model of verticality biased by the stroke, and to improve uprightness. Vestibular stimulations seem to be less relevant and efficient., (Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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