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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: stroke + spasticity + post  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 2 of 2 for stroke spasticity post. (0.03 seconds) 
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Taking the Plunge
Advance for Speech-Language Pathologists and Audiologists, PA - Nov 14, 2008
... burns, spasticity, stroke and paralysis and much, much more. Aquatic therapy is traditionally utilized by Occupational and Physical Therapists, ...
Rodman & Renshaw Annual Global Investment Conference Presenter ...
TMC Net, CT - Nov 7, 2008
SCT's lead clinical program REGENESIS, currently in Phase IIb, targets the treatment of stroke by repurposing approved and clinically well defined drugs. ...RODM
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: poststroke + spasticity + 0.42  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Allergan Inc. Q2 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
Seeking Alpha, NY - Jul 30, 2008
In Australia, BOTOX was approved for upper limbs that Juvenile Cerebral Palsy and the Korean FDA approved BOTOX for upper limb, both post-stroke spasticity ...AGN
Source: Google News

Use of botulinum toxin type A in poststroke spasticity -
A Brashear - ern, 2003 - Future Drugs
... All patients were at least 6 months poststroke and none ... of BOTOX for wrist and elbow
spasticity [16 ... all patients were at least 9 months post-stroke and received ...
-

I. DEFINITION OF SPASTICITY Spasticity is an imbalance of the sensorimotor system that demonstrates …
A BRASHEAR - Animal Models of Movement Disorders, 2005 - books.google.com
... of BTX-A in the treatment of poststroke spasticity have been ... patients were at least
6 months poststroke, and none ... 4 (wrist,-1.78 BTX-A group,-0.42 placebo group ...
-

[CITATION] I. DEFINITION OF SPASTICITY
A BRASHEAR
-

[PDF] … Intramuscular Injections of Botulinum Toxin A for the Treatment of Upper Limb Flexors Spasticity -
MF Khamees, M Kondeva, AA Eyadeh, AH Karar - KUWAIT MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2004 - kma.org.kw
... into the sleeve 2.5 (0.42) 1.3 (0.72)* 1.3 (0.81)* 1.28 (0.54)* 1.95 (0.42) ... as an
adjunctive treatment for selected patients with post-stroke spasticity of the ...

Reliability of the Modified Tardieu Scale and the Modified Ashworth Scale in adult patients with … -
J Mehrholz, K Wagner, D Meissner, K Grundmann, C … - Clinical Rehabilitation, 2005 - cre.sagepub.com
... (Modified Ashworth Scale: K =0.16-0.42; Modified Tardieu Scale: K =0.29 0.53), ... with
the Modified Ashworth Scale and may therefore be a more valid spasticity ...

[PDF] … COMPARATIVE STUDY ON THE INTER-RATER RELIABILITY OF THE ASHWORTH SCALES IN ASSESSMENT OF SPASTICITY -
I Tehran - Acta Medica Iranica, 2006 - diglib.tums.ac.ir
... Poor 0.43 0.22 0.42 0.22 61.6 OAS ... of the Tone Assessment Scale and the modified Ashworth
scale as clinical tools for assessing poststroke spasticity. ...

Interrater and Intrarater Reliability of the Modified Ashworth Scale in Children with Hypertonia. -
N Clopton, MPT Jennifer Dutton, MPT Tandy … - Pediatric Physical Therapy, 2005 - pedpt.com
... scale in patients with upper-limb poststroke spasticity. ... measures of spasticity in
post-stroke patients ... and the modified Ashworth scales as measures spasticity. ...

Relationships between Sensorimotor Impairments and Reaching Deficits in Acute Hemiparesis -
JM Wagner, CE Lang, SA Sahrmann, Q Hu, AJ Bastian, … - Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair, 2006 - nnr.sagepub.com
... of upper extremity (UE) strength, active range of motion, isolated movement control,
light touch sensation, joint position sense, spasticity, and shoulder pain ...

A home-based, self-administered stimulation program to improve selected hand functions of chronic … -
G Alon - Neurorehabilitation, 2003 - IOS Press
... in patients with upper-limb poststroke spasticity, Arch Phys ... and AK Jones, Post stroke
shoulder pain ... Functional electrostimulation in poststroke rehabil- itation ...

Characteristic Features of Disorders of the Upright Posture in Patients with Poststroke Hemipareses -
KI Ustinova, ME Ioffe, LA Chernikova - Human Physiology, 2003 - Springer
... KM, Vandervoot, AA, et al., Spasticity Measurement in ... of the Recovery Process in
Poststroke Patients: Clinical ... I., et al., The Post-stroke Hemiplegic Patient: I ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Treating Post-Stroke Spasticity

The treatment of stroke patients has seen several advances in recent years and among the most significant are two therapies for a post-stroke condition called spasticity. A common physical response to brain injury caused by stroke, spasticity causes muscles in the arms or legs to tighten uncontrollably, causing pain and discomfort. Left untreated, spasticity can have a profound impact on an individual's quality of life.

Below, Dr. Cindy Ivanhoe of the Baylor College of Medicine, offers an introduction to post-stroke spasticity, and emerging treatment options. First, what is spasticity?
CINDY IVANHOE, MD: Spasticity is a resistance in the muscles to stretch after an injury to the central nervous system. That injury can be the result of a stroke, multiple sclerosis, tumors, and a whole host of different diagnoses.

And what are the symptoms of this condition? What does it actually do to those who suffer from it?
When patients have spasticity, they may have a fixed clenching of their hand, or flexion of their fist. They may have trouble getting their arm away from their body so that it's difficult to clean under their arm. They may have abnormal posture. Patients may try to walk, but their feet want to turn inward. You may see patients whose legs will cross each other when you try to transfer them or when you try to clean them. Those are some of the things that you'll see in spasticity.

 

What are the long-term effects of this condition?
The type of recovery patients can have over time will be limited by spasticity if they don't receive appropriate treatment for it. They can have pain associated with their spasticity, or pain associated with attempts to move their joints. And if we don't try to move their joints, they'll have more pain over time. So spasticity really has a major effect, I think often an underestimated effect, on the quality of life of our patients.

Some spasticity is focal, and some is more generalized. How are they different?
Focal spasticity affects a smaller part of the body, such as a hand or an extremity. Generalized spasticity affects greater areas of the body.

What are the traditional treatments for spasticity?
Many people will start the treatment of spasticity with oral medications, which can relax the affected muscles that are causing the spasticity. The oral medications that are most commonly used for spasticity are diazepam (Valium), dantrolene, oral baclofen and tizanidine, or Zanaflex, which is a relatively new medication.

But oral medications will very often cause sedation in patients, or lethargy. They may also increase their confusion.

The medications also will affect their entire body, so if you're trying to target specific muscles, it makes little sense to give medications that affect the whole body.

Are there any new treatment alternatives for focal spasticity?
For focal spasticity, I generally use botulinum toxin A, or Botox, because it's a way to target smaller areas with injections rather than treating people with medications that will involve systemic side effects.

Botox is an off-label therapy for spasticity, which means it is not as yet FDA-approved for the use of spasticity. It's not uncommon for physicians to use medications already approved for other conditions, and the Botox injections have had a positive impact in treating patients with focal spasticity. Botox is one of the first really effective, new treatments that we've had for focal spasticity in decades.

Botox works by entering nerve endings around the muscle where it is injected, and blocking the release of chemical messages that cause the muscle to contract. Is this correct?
Yes. It allows us to target specific muscles. And there are no sedating side effects.

What are its known side effects?
It has a really low side-effect profile. Patients may have a little bit of bleeding at the site of an injection. They may have a little bit of tenderness during the injection. Some patients have had some flu-like symptoms for a while following an injection, but overall, the side effect profile is quite limited.

How long does the effect of a Botox injection last?
On the average, Botox injections last approximately three months.

And what are the latest treatment options for people living with generalized spasticity?
The intrathecal baclofen, or ITB therapy, is a relatively new treatment, which has had a dramatic effect on the lives of my patients with generalized spasticity.

What is ITB therapy?
It's a pump that's implanted under the skin that is connected to the area around the spinal cord and is able to deliver medication continuously, providing a greater effect on larger muscles. It can also affect smaller muscle groups, as well. You can vary the amount of medication with time of the day, and it has the most dramatic effect on spasticity in the lower extremities and trunk, and to a less predictable degree, the upper extremities.

What is the medication used in ITB therapy?
It's called baclofen, and originally, people used oral baclofen to treat spasticity. But because oral baclofen does not penetrate into the brain very easily, it would take high doses of medication to get a small amount into the central nervous system. With the intrathecal baclofen pump, or ITB therapy, we are able to deliver very minute amounts of baclofen directly into the central nervous system.

What is the benefit of the pump over the oral baclofen?
Because ITB delivers such a small amount of medication, patients don't have the same sedation,lethargy, and weakness that you see with the oral medication. Additionally, the effects of the medication given intrathecally are much greater than the effects of the medication given orally.

How is the pump implanted?
Usually the pump is implanted in the lower abdomen, and then a catheter is tunneled under the skin and threaded up into the intrathecal space around their spinal cord to deliver the medication.

Who is a good candidate for ITB therapy?
I have stroke patients who had intrathecal baclofen pumps who are in a vegetative state, who have no true interaction with their environment. I also have stroke patients who have come to me who were walking at the time that I prescribed the baclofen pump, but they wanted to be able to walk better, or were concerned about degenerative changes in their joints as they aged, and those patients are often candidates for ITB therapy as well. So there's a whole spectrum of people who would be appropriate candidates for this therapy.

 
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