Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Physical Therapy (5)
- Education (2)
- Educational Methods (2)
- Other Rehabilitation and Therapy (2)
- Alternative and Complementary Medicine (1)
-
- Arts and Humanities (1)
- Biomedical Engineering and Bioengineering (1)
- Cognition and Perception (1)
- Communication Sciences and Disorders (1)
- Engineering (1)
- Higher Education and Teaching (1)
- Kinesiotherapy (1)
- Medical Education (1)
- Mental and Social Health (1)
- Music (1)
- Music Education (1)
- Occupational Therapy (1)
- Other Mental and Social Health (1)
- Other Music (1)
- Physiotherapy (1)
- Psychology (1)
- Social and Behavioral Sciences (1)
- Special Education and Teaching (1)
- Speech Pathology and Audiology (1)
- Sports Sciences (1)
- Teacher Education and Professional Development (1)
- Keyword
-
- Rehabilitation (4)
- Adolescence (1)
- Autologous chondrocyte implantation (1)
- Balance (1)
- Brain-machine interface (1)
-
- Breast cancer (1)
- Burnout (1)
- Career Sustaining Behaviors (1)
- Caregiver Education (1)
- Chart review (1)
- Clinical Supervision (1)
- Clinical outcome (1)
- Clinical prediction (1)
- Concussion (1)
- EEG (1)
- Endurance (1)
- Glenohumeral Internal Rotation Deficit (1)
- Linear discriminant analysis (1)
- Muscular endurance (1)
- Music Therapy (1)
- Neuroplasticity (1)
- Patient Education (1)
- Physical Therapy (1)
- Professional Quality of Life (1)
- Qualitative Research (1)
- Quality of life (1)
- Range of motion and strength (1)
- Rehabiliation Sciences (1)
- Rehabilitative ultrasound imaging (1)
- Responsiveness (1)
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 11 of 11
Full-Text Articles in Rehabilitation and Therapy
The Role Of Rehabilitation Following Autologous Chondrocyte Implantation: A Retrospective Chart Review, Jenny L. Toonstra, Jennifer Sebert Howard, Timothy L. Uhl, Robert A. English, Carl G. Mattacola
The Role Of Rehabilitation Following Autologous Chondrocyte Implantation: A Retrospective Chart Review, Jenny L. Toonstra, Jennifer Sebert Howard, Timothy L. Uhl, Robert A. English, Carl G. Mattacola
Physical Therapy Faculty Publications
PURPOSE/BACKGROUND: Clinical outcomes following autologous chondrocyte implantation (ACI) are influenced by multiple factors, including patient demographics, lesion characteristics, quality of the surgical repair, and post-operative rehabilitation. However, it is currently unknown what specific characteristics of rehabilitation have the greatest influence on clinical outcomes following ACI. The purpose of this study was to conduct a retrospective chart review of patients undergoing ACI with the intent to describe this patient population's demographics, clinical outcomes, and rehabilitation practices. This study aimed to assess the consistency of the documentation process relative to post-operative rehabilitation in order to provide information and guide initiatives for improving …
Reliability Of The Myotonometer For Assessment Of Posterior Shoulder Tightness, Caitlyn M. Kerins, Stephanie D. Moore, Timothy A. Butterfield, Patrick O. Mckeon, Timothy L. Uhl
Reliability Of The Myotonometer For Assessment Of Posterior Shoulder Tightness, Caitlyn M. Kerins, Stephanie D. Moore, Timothy A. Butterfield, Patrick O. Mckeon, Timothy L. Uhl
Physical Therapy Faculty Publications
BACKGROUND/PURPOSE: The Myotonometer® is an electronic tissue compliance meter that has been used to quantify the compliance of soft tissues. The Myotonometer® may be a valuable tool to measure the effectiveness of interventions commonly used to increase tissue compliance in individuals with posterior shoulder tightness (PST). Limited data exist on reliability and responsiveness of the Myotonometer® for assessment of soft tissues about the shoulder; therefore, the purpose of this study is to determine the intra- and inter-session reliability and responsiveness of the Myotonometer® in measuring tissue compliance of the posterior shoulder musculature in asymptomatic subjects with PST.
METHODS: Fifteen asymptomatic …
Development Of An Eeg Brain-Machine Interface To Aid In Recovery Of Motor Function After Neurological Injury, Elizabeth Salmon
Development Of An Eeg Brain-Machine Interface To Aid In Recovery Of Motor Function After Neurological Injury, Elizabeth Salmon
Theses and Dissertations--Biomedical Engineering
Impaired motor function following neurological injury may be overcome through therapies that induce neuroplastic changes in the brain. Therapeutic methods include repetitive exercises that promote use-dependent plasticity (UDP), the benefit of which may be increased by first administering peripheral nerve stimulation (PNS) to activate afferent fibers, resulting in increased cortical excitability. We speculate that PNS delivered only in response to attempted movement would induce timing-dependent plasticity (TDP), a mechanism essential to normal motor learning. Here we develop a brain-machine interface (BMI) to detect movement intent and effort in healthy volunteers (n=5) from their electroencephalogram (EEG). This could be used in …
A Comparison Of Upper Extremity Function Between Female Breast Cancer Survivors And Healthy Controls: Typical Self- Report Of Function, Motion, Strength And Muscular Endurance, Mary Insana Fisher
A Comparison Of Upper Extremity Function Between Female Breast Cancer Survivors And Healthy Controls: Typical Self- Report Of Function, Motion, Strength And Muscular Endurance, Mary Insana Fisher
Theses and Dissertations--Rehabilitation Sciences
Many women who have experienced breast cancer (BC) report continued impairments in upper extremity (UE) function beyond the time required for normal healing after surgical treatment. Most research supporting this has not made comparisons between survivors of breast cancer (BCS) to a sample of healthy women. This lack of comparison to a healthy cohort prevents an understanding of whether continued deficits in UE function are due to normal aging or the BC treatment.
The purpose of this research was to compare quality of life (QOL) and UE function among long term breast cancer survivors and similar aged women without cancer. …
What Keeps Us Well? Professional Quality Of Life And Career Sustaining Behaviors Of Music Therapy Professionals, Shane C. Swezey
What Keeps Us Well? Professional Quality Of Life And Career Sustaining Behaviors Of Music Therapy Professionals, Shane C. Swezey
Theses and Dissertations--Music
Self-care can be seen as not only critical for individual professionals, but also for the growth of the helping professions and the quality of care which clients receive. The purpose of this study was to investigate use of career-sustaining behaviors and the levels of professional quality of life in music therapy professionals. This study investigated research questions regarding use of career sustaining behaviors and levels of professional quality of life, the relationship between these variables, the differences in the use of career sustaining behavior by demographics, and the use of music as a self-care strategy.
An online survey was sent …
Alterations In Visual Processing And Its Impact On Upright Postural Stability In Athletes Following Sport-Related Concussion, Andrea E. Cripps
Alterations In Visual Processing And Its Impact On Upright Postural Stability In Athletes Following Sport-Related Concussion, Andrea E. Cripps
Theses and Dissertations--Rehabilitation Sciences
Athletes are at risk of sustaining a concussion in all sports and at all competitive levels which may lead to balance impairments. Balance results from the integration of visual, vestibular, and somatosensory information. The underlying pathophysiology for balance impairments is not well understood and visuo-motor processing impairments and how these impairments contribute to balance in concussed athletes has not been reported. Objectives: (1) to investigate the influence of visual perturbation on upright postural stability and balance in athletes who have recently suffered a sports-related concussion, (2) to establish the test-retest reliability of a simple visuo-motor processing task. Design: A longitudinal, …
Description And Service Innovation In Adolescent Transition Within Kentucky State Agency Education Programs, Amy C. Marshall
Description And Service Innovation In Adolescent Transition Within Kentucky State Agency Education Programs, Amy C. Marshall
Theses and Dissertations--Rehabilitation Sciences
Of all Kentucky youth, state agency children are at the highest risk of making unsuccessful post-secondary transitions to adulthood. The intent of both studies comprising this dissertation was to understand and guide transition planning to make future improvements to transitions of adolescents in state agency programs.
The Kentucky Youth at Risk in Transition Study was a mixed methods study that identified and described the understandings of student transitions in state agency education programs from the perspectives of youth and administrators. The study included 105 nontraditional education programs funded and supervised by the Kentucky Educational Collaborative for State Agency Children (KECSAC). …
Predictors Of Outcome Following Standardized Rehabilitation For Patients With Shoulder Pain, Stephanie D. Moore
Predictors Of Outcome Following Standardized Rehabilitation For Patients With Shoulder Pain, Stephanie D. Moore
Theses and Dissertations--Rehabilitation Sciences
Shoulder dysfunction is frequently treated and persistent symptoms are common. Differential diagnosis of shoulder injuries can be challenging and knowledge of a diagnosis alone does not appear to be enough information to predict outcomes. Determination of a set of factors that predict outcome would assist clinicians in making the most effective treatment decision for patients with shoulder pain. The purposes of this dissertation were to investigate patient-clinician agreement in an orthopedic population of patients with shoulder pain and to determine what combination of factors best predicts positive patient-reported outcome following standardized rehabilitation in patients with shoulder pain.
In the first …
Developing The Rehabilitation Education For Caregivers And Patients (Recap) Model: Application To Physical Therapy In Stroke Rehabilitation, Megan M. Danzl
Developing The Rehabilitation Education For Caregivers And Patients (Recap) Model: Application To Physical Therapy In Stroke Rehabilitation, Megan M. Danzl
Theses and Dissertations--Rehabilitation Sciences
Patient and caregiver education is recognized as a critical component of stroke rehabilitation and physical therapy practice yet the informational needs of stroke survivors and caregivers are largely unmet and optimal educational interventions need to be established. The objective of this dissertation was to develop a theory and model of “Rehabilitation Education for Caregivers and Patients” (RECAP) in the context of physical therapy and stroke rehabilitation, grounded in the experiences and perceptions of stroke survivors, their caregivers, and physical therapists.
Qualitative research methods with a novel grounded theory approach were used. Potential constructs of RECAP were identified from existing research. …
Scapular Muscle Assessment In Patients With Lateral Epicondylalgia, Joseph M. Day
Scapular Muscle Assessment In Patients With Lateral Epicondylalgia, Joseph M. Day
Theses and Dissertations--Rehabilitation Sciences
The role rehabilitation plays in the management of patients with lateral epicondylalgia (LE) remains elusive secondary to high recurrence rates. Addressing scapular muscle deficits may be important in the rehabilitation of patients with LE. However, it is unknown if scapular muscle impairments exist in a working population of patients with LE. The purpose of this dissertation was to assess scapular muscle strength and endurance in a working population of patients with LE.
Clinical scapular muscle assessment tools are limited in their ability to isolate specific muscles. Rehabilitative ultrasound imaging (RUSI) is a potentially useful tool but few studies have investigated …
Experiences Of Speech-Language Pathology Graduate Students: An Exploratory Phenomenological Study, Anysia J. Ensslen
Experiences Of Speech-Language Pathology Graduate Students: An Exploratory Phenomenological Study, Anysia J. Ensslen
Theses and Dissertations--Educational Leadership Studies
Within the past decade little research has been conducted in the United States to examine the preparedness of beginning speech-language pathologists; the seminal article used for this research study comes from the United Kingdom (Horton, Byng, Bunning, & Pring, 2004). Literature from the past few decades indicates that there may be deficiencies in the way that beginning speech-language pathologists are being trained clinically.
The review of the literature suggests that the field may lack a clear and broadly supported learning theory or framework for the clinical supervision and training of speech-language pathology graduate students. The literature further supports the importance …