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Results of a long-term uniform system of neurorehabilitation in patients with incomplete thoracic spinal cord injury

Authors :
Katarzyna Leszczyńska
Wojciech Fortuna
Stefan Okurowski
Agnieszka Wincek
Paweł Tabakow
Juliusz Huber
Source :
Annals of Agricultural and Environmental Medicine. 29:94-102
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Institute of Rural Health, 2021.

Abstract

The results of kinesiotherapy treatment in patients after incomplete spinal cord injury (iSCI) are inconclusive, mostly due to different, subjective evaluation methods. The study aims to evaluate the range of functional regeneration in long-term 13 months follow-up using comparative neurophysiological tests after uniform kinesiotherapy in patients with thoracic iSCI.Comparative tests were performed of sensory perception in dermatomes Th1-S1, electromyography (at rest-rEMG and during maximal contraction-mcEMG) in the muscles of the trunk and lower extremities, electroneurography (ENG) of the motor fibres of the lower extremities, and motor-evoked potential induced transcranially (MEP) before and after treatment in 25 iSCI patients. All subjects were treated with the same kinesiotherapeutic procedures.A moderate increase was found in amplitudes in rEMG and mcEMG recordings fromthe rectus abdominis and rectus femoris muscles, MEPs amplitudes, and amplitudes after peroneal nerve stimulations in ENG studies. There was no improvement in sensory perception.Following the proposed kinesiotherapy algorithm, patients after thoracic iSCI presented a moderate more motor than sensory functions improvement. Applied neurorehabilitation evoked normalization of muscle tension, moderate improvement of rectus abdominis and rectus femoris muscles motor units activity, and motor central and peripheral neural impulses transmission. The comparative neurophysiological assessment provide a more precise and objective insight into the functional status of afferent and efferent systems than the classical clinical approach in iSCI patients.

Details

ISSN :
18982263 and 12321966
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Agricultural and Environmental Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4f90e96ded0cb290bd893f46e41d5f5c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.26444/aaem/135554