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Articles 1 - 16 of 16
Full-Text Articles in Rehabilitation and Therapy
Development Of A Step Counting Algorithm Using The Ambulatory Tibia Load Analysis System For Tibia Fracture Patients, Arad Lajevardi-Khosh, Ben Tresco, Ami Stuart, Sarina Sinclair, Matt Ackerman, Erik Kubiak, Tomasz Petelenz, Robert Hitchcock
Development Of A Step Counting Algorithm Using The Ambulatory Tibia Load Analysis System For Tibia Fracture Patients, Arad Lajevardi-Khosh, Ben Tresco, Ami Stuart, Sarina Sinclair, Matt Ackerman, Erik Kubiak, Tomasz Petelenz, Robert Hitchcock
School of Medicine Faculty Publications
Introduction: Ambulation can be used to monitor the healing of lower extremity fractures. However, the ambulatory behavior of tibia fracture patients remains unknown due to an inability to continuously quantify ambulation outside of the clinic. The goal of this study was to design and validate an algorithm to assess ambulation in tibia fracture patients using the ambulatory tibial load analysis system during recovery, outside of the clinic. Methods Data were collected from a cyclic tester, 14 healthy volunteers performing a 2-min walk test on the treadmill, and 10 tibia fracture patients who wore the ambulatory tibial load analysis system during …
Capabilities Of Upper Extremity Test (Cue-T) V1.1 (Jul 2016) – Training Video, Ralph J. Marino
Capabilities Of Upper Extremity Test (Cue-T) V1.1 (Jul 2016) – Training Video, Ralph J. Marino
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine Training Videos and Materials
No abstract provided.
The Use Of Neuromuscular Electrical Simulation In Glenohumeral Unidirectional Instability When An Exercise-Based Approach Has Failed: A Case Study, Kunal Bhanot, Navpreet Kaur, J Butler
The Use Of Neuromuscular Electrical Simulation In Glenohumeral Unidirectional Instability When An Exercise-Based Approach Has Failed: A Case Study, Kunal Bhanot, Navpreet Kaur, J Butler
Physical Therapy Collection
Purpose of this case study was to report the role of neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) to restore strength and normal motion in a patient with unidirectional shoulder instability or glenohumeral internal rotation deficit (GIRD).
Using Concept Mapping To Develop A Human Rights Based Indicator Framework To Assess Country Efforts To Strengthen Rehabilitation Provision And Policy: The Rehabilitation System Diagnosis And Dialogue Framework (Resyst), Dimitrios Skempes, John L. Melvin, Per Von Groote, Gerold Stucki, Jerome Bickenbach
Using Concept Mapping To Develop A Human Rights Based Indicator Framework To Assess Country Efforts To Strengthen Rehabilitation Provision And Policy: The Rehabilitation System Diagnosis And Dialogue Framework (Resyst), Dimitrios Skempes, John L. Melvin, Per Von Groote, Gerold Stucki, Jerome Bickenbach
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine Faculty Papers
Background: Rehabilitation is crucial for the realization of the right to health and a proper concern of global health. Yet, reliable information to guide rehabilitation service planning is unavailable in many countries in part due to the lack of appropriate indicators. To ensure universal health coverage and meet the central imperative of "leaving no one behind" countries must be able to assess key aspects of rehabilitation policy and provision and monitor how they have discharged their human rights responsibilities towards those most disadvantaged, including people with disability. This article describes the process of developing an expert guided indicator framework to …
Disability Research Report: Spinal Cord Injuries, Jacob Crumpler
Disability Research Report: Spinal Cord Injuries, Jacob Crumpler
Kinesiology Class Publications
Disabilities that stem from spinal cord injuries are tragic and inconvenient, no matter who is going through it. In an article by the Mayo Clinic staff, it says “If you’ve recently experienced a spinal cord injury, it might seem like every aspect of your life has been affected. You might feel the effects of your injury mentally, emotionally and socially”(Mayo Clinic, 2017). This is very real in the world we live in today because the ages that are mostly impacted by this injury range from late teens to around thirty years of age. The Spinal cord is the core connection …
The High-Level Mobility Assessment Tool (Himat) In Myotonic Dystrophy Type 2: A Case Report, Kim B. Smith, Evan M. Pucillo
The High-Level Mobility Assessment Tool (Himat) In Myotonic Dystrophy Type 2: A Case Report, Kim B. Smith, Evan M. Pucillo
Physical Therapy Collection
Myotonic dystrophy type 2 (DM2) is a progressive muscular dystrophy with multi-system manifestations and can affect functional mobility, gait, and balance. Currently, there are few reports of functional outcome measures in this population. This case describes the change in function detected by the High-level Mobility Assessment Tool (HiMAT) and 30-second Chair Stand Test (CST) in a high-functioning adult female with DM2 after physical therapy treatment. The patient’s chief complaint was muscular pain and fatigue that affected activities of daily living (ADLs). Multimodal physical therapy focused on neuromuscular re-education, balance and strength training, patient education, and moderate cardiorespiratory training. Improvements were …
Predicting Gains With Visuospatial Training After Stroke Using An Eeg Measure Of Frontoparietal Circuit Function, Robert J. Zhou, Hossein M. Hondori, Maryam Khademi, Jessica M. Cassidy, Katherine M. Wu, Derek Z. Yang, Nikhita Kathuria, Fareshte R. Erani, Lucy Dodakian, Alison Mckenzie, Cristina V. Lopes, Walt Scacchi, Ramesh Srinivasan, Steven C. Cramer
Predicting Gains With Visuospatial Training After Stroke Using An Eeg Measure Of Frontoparietal Circuit Function, Robert J. Zhou, Hossein M. Hondori, Maryam Khademi, Jessica M. Cassidy, Katherine M. Wu, Derek Z. Yang, Nikhita Kathuria, Fareshte R. Erani, Lucy Dodakian, Alison Mckenzie, Cristina V. Lopes, Walt Scacchi, Ramesh Srinivasan, Steven C. Cramer
Physical Therapy Faculty Articles and Research
The heterogeneity of stroke prompts the need for predictors of individual treatment response to rehabilitation therapies. We previously studied healthy subjects with EEG and identified a frontoparietal circuit in which activity predicted training-related gains in visuomotor tracking. Here we asked whether activity in this same frontoparietal circuit also predicts training-related gains in visuomotor tracking in patients with chronic hemiparetic stroke. Subjects (n = 12) underwent dense-array EEG recording at rest, then received 8 sessions of visuomotor tracking training delivered via home-based telehealth methods. Subjects showed significant training-related gains in the primary behavioral endpoint, Success Rate score on a standardized test …
State Of Evidence For Everyday Technology Use In Upper Extremity Motor Recovery Post-Stroke, Claire Ferree, Dillon Oldham, Amanda Robert, Alana Yee
State Of Evidence For Everyday Technology Use In Upper Extremity Motor Recovery Post-Stroke, Claire Ferree, Dillon Oldham, Amanda Robert, Alana Yee
School of Occupational Therapy Master's Capstone Projects (2016-2021)
The research team, in consultation with collaborating clinician Sarah Bicker, an OTR/L at Harborview Medical Center, researched everyday technology applications. The team conducted a systematic review considering what evidence exists about the effectiveness of commercially available everyday technology (ET) for improving upper extremity motor control and/or motivation to participate in therapy in clients post-stroke. The evidence was promising in support of the use of ET as indicated by improved upper extremity motor control outcomes and client and clinician reports of satisfaction, motivation, and engagement in post-stroke rehabilitation. Clinicians should consider the benefits of implementing ET for upper extremity motor recovery …
Effect Of Stable And Unstable Surfaces On The Serratus Anterior Muscle Activation In A Kinetic-Chain Exercise Among Healthy Adults, Navpreet Kaur, Kunal Bhanot, Germaine Ferreira
Effect Of Stable And Unstable Surfaces On The Serratus Anterior Muscle Activation In A Kinetic-Chain Exercise Among Healthy Adults, Navpreet Kaur, Kunal Bhanot, Germaine Ferreira
Physical Therapy Collection
PURPOSE/HYPOTHESIS: The stabilizing action of the serratus anterior (SA) muscle is vital in maintaining proper scapulothoracic rhythm.1,2 Poor activation of SA muscle could lead to many shoulder dysfunctions.1,3 This warrants for exercises that are best to activate the SA muscle. Kinetic-chain recruitment during exercises has demonstrated increased SA activation due to the myofascial connections between various segments of the body.4–6 Variation of surfaces during an exercise has been shown to alter the muscle recruitment patterns.7–9 The primary purpose of this study was to determine if the unstable surface can influence SA muscle activity during the kinetic …
Global Health And Disability: A Review And Call To Action For All Rehabilitation Professions, Evan M. Pucillo, Matthew B. Huish, Quinn Tate, Edward C. O'Bryan, Ty T. Dickerson
Global Health And Disability: A Review And Call To Action For All Rehabilitation Professions, Evan M. Pucillo, Matthew B. Huish, Quinn Tate, Edward C. O'Bryan, Ty T. Dickerson
Physical Therapy Collection
The World Health Organization estimates 15% of the world’s population is living with disability and anticipates an increase as the population ages. Disability is a growing healthcare concern and presents a tremendous burden to all nations. The world will soon need to provide health and rehabilitative care for an enormous number of persons with disability. The purpose of this article is to provide a brief narrative review pertaining to global health and rehabilitation, and to motivate the rehabilitation professions in taking immediate action through further investment in global health initiatives to manage both the current and projected burden of disability. …
Development And Initial Validation Of The O&M Vissit For Orientation And Mobility Specialists To Determine Service Intensity, Heather R. Munro, Shannon Darst, Rona L. Pogrund
Development And Initial Validation Of The O&M Vissit For Orientation And Mobility Specialists To Determine Service Intensity, Heather R. Munro, Shannon Darst, Rona L. Pogrund
Faculty Publications
The purpose of this study was to provide initial validation of the Orientation & Mobility Visual Impairment Scale of Service Intensity of Texas (O&M VISSIT) intended for use by orientation and mobility (O&M) specialists to determine a recommended type and amount of O&M services for students on their caseloads based on each student’s identified needs. The validity and reliability of the scale were calculated using a mixed-methods survey research design, with purposive expert sampling. The O&M VISSIT was found to be significantly valid in social and content validity and moderately valid in consequential validity. The O&M VISSIT is a moderately …
Can Patient Reported Outcomes Guide Therapy Needs In Foot And Ankle Patients?, Jeff Houck, Jillian Santer, Judith Baumhauer
Can Patient Reported Outcomes Guide Therapy Needs In Foot And Ankle Patients?, Jeff Houck, Jillian Santer, Judith Baumhauer
Faculty Publications - College of Physical Therapy
Introduction/Purpose: The patient acceptable symptom state (PASS) is a validated question establishing if patients activity and symptoms are at a satisfactory low level for pain and function. Surprisingly, ~20% of foot and ankle patients at their initial visit present for care with an acceptable symptom state (i.e. PASS yes). These patients are important to identify to prevent over treatment and avoid excessive cost. It is also unclear what health domains (Pain Interference (PI), Physical Function (PF), or Depression (Dep)) influence a patients judgement of their PASS state (i.e. why they are seeking treatment). The purpose of this analysis is to …
Ability Of Patient-Reported Outcomes To Characterize Patient Acceptable Symptom State (Pass) After Attending A Primary Care Physical Therapist And Medical Doctor Collaborative Service: A Cross-Sectional Study, Jeff Houck, Daniel Kang, Tyler Cuddeford, Sarah Rahkola
Ability Of Patient-Reported Outcomes To Characterize Patient Acceptable Symptom State (Pass) After Attending A Primary Care Physical Therapist And Medical Doctor Collaborative Service: A Cross-Sectional Study, Jeff Houck, Daniel Kang, Tyler Cuddeford, Sarah Rahkola
Faculty Publications - College of Physical Therapy
Objectives: To determine if the Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS) physical function, pain interference, self-efficacy, and global rating of normal function (GRNF) scales are able to accurately characterize a patient’s acceptable symptom state (PASS).
Design: A cross-sectional analysis, using receiver operator curves and chi-square analysis to explore criteria to determine thresholds (80% and 95% sensitivity/specificity) for PASS that are applicable to PROMIS and GRNF scales.
Setting: Phone survey after primary care. Participants: Patients (NZ94) attending primary care for musculoskeletal problems. Interventions: Not applicable. Main Outcomes Measures: Accuracy and proportion of patients classified as PASS Yes or No.
Results: Receiver …
Patient Experiences Of A Physiotherapy-Led Multidisciplinary Rehabilitative Intervention After Successful Treatment For Oesophago-Gastric Cancer, Annemarie Bennett, L. O'Neill, D. Connolly, E. M. Guinan, L. Boland, Suzanne Doyle, J. O'Sullivan, J. V. Reynolds, J. Hussey
Patient Experiences Of A Physiotherapy-Led Multidisciplinary Rehabilitative Intervention After Successful Treatment For Oesophago-Gastric Cancer, Annemarie Bennett, L. O'Neill, D. Connolly, E. M. Guinan, L. Boland, Suzanne Doyle, J. O'Sullivan, J. V. Reynolds, J. Hussey
Articles
Purpose To qualitatively explore the perceived impact of a 12-week rehabilitative intervention for oesophago-gastric cancer survivors on their physical, mental and social wellbeing. Methods Of the 21 participants who completed the intervention, 19 took part in a semi-structured focus group interview. Four audio-taped focus groups were held, ranging in size from two to eight participants. Focus groups were transcribed and analysed using a descriptive qualitative approach. Results At recruitment, participants were 23.5 ± 15.2 months post-surgery and all had suboptimal fitness levels. Participants reported improvements in their physical capacity and ability to carry out activities of daily living during the …
Grip And Muscle Strength Dynamometry In Acute Burn Injury: Evaluation Of An Updated Assessment Protocol, Paul M. Gittings, Dana A. Hince, Benedict M. Wand, Fiona M. Wood, Dale W. Edgar
Grip And Muscle Strength Dynamometry In Acute Burn Injury: Evaluation Of An Updated Assessment Protocol, Paul M. Gittings, Dana A. Hince, Benedict M. Wand, Fiona M. Wood, Dale W. Edgar
Physiotherapy Papers and Journal Articles
External stabilization is reported to improve reliability of hand held dynamometry, yet this has not been tested in burns. We aimed to assess the reliability of dynamometry using an external system of stabilization in people with moderate burn injury and explore construct validity of strength assessment using dynamometry.
Participants were assessed on muscle and grip strength three times on each side. Assessment occurred three times per week for up to four weeks. Within session reliability was assessed using intraclass correlations calculated for within session data grouped prior to surgery, immediately after surgery and in the sub-acute phase of injury. Minimum …
Expert Consensus For Respiratory Physiotherapy Management Of Mechanically Ventilated Adults With Community-Acquired Pneumonia: A Delphi Study, Lisa Van Der Lee, Anne-Marie Hill, Shane Patman
Expert Consensus For Respiratory Physiotherapy Management Of Mechanically Ventilated Adults With Community-Acquired Pneumonia: A Delphi Study, Lisa Van Der Lee, Anne-Marie Hill, Shane Patman
Physiotherapy Papers and Journal Articles
Rationale and aims: Patients with community‐acquired pneumonia (CAP) are frequently admitted to an intensive care unit. Physiotherapy may be provided to optimize respiratory function; however, there is significant variability in clinical practice and limited research directing best practice for this cohort. This study aimed to determine expert consensus for best physiotherapy practice for invasively ventilated adults with CAP.
Method: A modified Delphi technique involved an international expert panel completing three rounds of an online questionnaire. The initial 35‐statement questionnaire, based on a systematic literature review and survey of current clinical practice, covered physiotherapy assessment and treatment of intubated patients with …