13 research outputs found

    Short narrative review on main winter sports-related accidents: epidemiology, injury patterns, arguments for prophylactic behavior to avoid orthopedic and catastrophic neurological injuries

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    Winter-sport participation may be associated with a risk of injuries. The article provides a brief overview of the epidemiology of winter sports-related trauma, referring to common skiing and snowboarding injuries in professional athletes or inexperienced ones (amateurs), to determine injury patterns, crash circumstances, their pathological repercussions, and possible preventive interventions. Known risk factors for the occurrence of injuries are: lack of experience in snow-sports, suboptimal skill and technical level, poor physical fitness level, fatigue, risk-taking behavior, alcohol consumption, absence or rented and/ or faulty equipment and protective devices, high speed, ice on the slope, bad weather conditions and poor visibility, crowd on the track. This short exposure aims to educate younger (recreational) skiers and snowboarders to prevent traumatic injuries to the limbs and especially the catastrophic ones, resulting in central nervous system lesions, with devastating consequences for athletes, their families, and communities. The paper has a multidisciplinary addressability: it may be useful for general practitioners and young specialists in orthopedics, neurology, physical medicine & rehabilitation, and kinetotherapy

    From “cage to independence”: good outcomes of an unstable (burst) lumbar fracture, surgically managed with an expandable titanium vertebral cage implant, with posterior transpedicular instrumentation, and rehabilitation program – case presentation

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    Introduction: The thoracolumbar junction (T11-L2) is biomechanically prone to spinal cord injuries (SCI), as it marks the transition from the rigid thoracic segment to the flexible lumbar spine. The damage of the spinal cord is due to a high-energy trauma (mainly motor vehicle accidents, falls from height, etc), in most cases resulting burst fractures of the lumbar region. The vertebral body is crushed in all directions, retro pulsed bony fragments are spread out towards the spinal canal, damaging the spinal cord, and causing neurologic injuries. Case report: This is a retrospective case study of a slim 43-year-old woman who suffered on 23.06.2018 a polytrauma (accidental fall from 3m height, from tree), associating thoraco-abdominal contusions, without cranial trauma and a severe L1 vertebral comminuted / burst fracture, followed by flaccid T12 AIS-A (complete) paraplegia. She underwent a complex neurosurgical approach, with a self-expandable metallic cage (Stryker) and posterior transpedicular stabilization for decompression and circumferential fusion in one stage, without cavity involvement. In an early post-acute stage she was admitted to the Rehabilitation Clinic (from 10.07.2018 until 31.08.2018) as a T12 AIS-C paraplegia (incomplete neurological lesion, with a global motor score 59/100; lower legs motor score 9/50 [4/25 R+5/25 L], with neurogenic bowel and bladder. The evolution was favorable and she was discharged as L2 AIS-D paraplegia (global motor score 70/100; lower legs motor score 20/50 [10/25 R+10/25 L]. Discussion: This case report emphasizes the benefits and functional outcomes after a comprehensive therapeutic approach, of a patient with unstable (burst) lumbar fracture, surgically managed with an expandable titanium vertebral cage implant with posterior transpedicular instrumentation, followed by a complex rehabilitation program, Stryker distractible vertebral body replacement implant is an expandable device, which can adapt to the patient`s anatomy, enabling the neurosurgeons to treat severe burst fractures. Rehabilitation objectives were focused on B-ADL independence (activity, component of the ICF-DH framework) – transfers, orthostatic posture, restore walking, bladder control. The vital prognosis and functional outcome were favorable. Although she was able to use a walking frame at discharge, there were a few drawbacks in what concerns the professional reintegration, due to specific external barriers (she was a military personnel, had neither driving licensee, nor an adapted car). Conclusions: This clinical case underlines the importance of a complex and multidisciplinary approach, prompt surgical intervention and rehabilitation during the early post-acute phase

    ACUTE SPINAL EPIDURAL HEMATOMA, CLINICAL AND ETIOPATHOGENIC DIAGNOSTIC DIFFICULTIES – CASE PRESENTATION AND SYNTHESIS OF THE LITERATURE

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    Introduction: Epidural hematoma has a double anatomopathological topography: intracranial and/ or spinal. Its etiology is complex: post-traumatic (spinal trauma, or lumbar puncture), iatrogenic (secondary to an inadequate anticoagulation or antiplatelet treatment), congenital or acquired disorders of coagulation (leukemia, hepatic cirrhosis), secondary to intense Valsalva maneuvers (e.g. during labor, or an intense physical effort), and idiopathic. The purpose of this article is to present a clinical case of acute spinal epidural hematoma (SEDH) with atypical clinical picture and a puzzled pathophysiological mechanism, and also a brief review of the relevant literature. Case presentation: An 80-years-old male patient, with locomotor disability (bilateral congenital foot deformity), and multiple cardiovascular comorbidities (chronic atrial fibrillation (AF), dilated cardiomyopathy and contractile dysfunction (chronic heart failure, with left ventricle ejection fraction 40 %), chronically anticoagulated with a vitamin K antagonist (acenocumarol). The elderly submitted a body-level fall without cranial trauma, event followed by a short loss of consciousness (without convulsions or sphincter relaxation). He suffered a low-energy cervical fracture (C7 vertebral injury) and a posterolateral acute SEDH at C3-Th2 vertebral levels. Decompressive hemilaminectomy at the C4-Th2 levels and evacuation of the SEDH, was performed during the early sub-acute phase. The patient was transferred in our rehabilitation clinic as C4 AIS-C tetraplegia (global motor score 50/100), neurogenic bladder and bowel, with post surgical wound dehiscence (healed per secundam). The subject had a favorable neurological evolution and was discharged as C7 AIS-D tetraplegia (global motor score 81/100). Discussion: The case particularity consists in a puzzled etiopathogenetic mechanisms and difficulty to accurately indicate the chronological chain of events generating the acute SEDH. An overdosed anticoagulant therapy might be incriminated as an iatrogenic cause for a “spontaneous” SEDH, but most probably its etiology is complex, probably traumatic, consequence of the cervical spine fracture due the low-intensity biomechanical impact. The complex predisposing circumstances to accidental fall in our elderly patient were due to the: - impaired, unstable locomotor function, secondary to his bilateral congenital clubfoot deformity / disability - chronic AF, contractile dysfunction and hypodiastolic phenomena, with cardiogenic syncope and global brain ischemia or transient ischemic cerebral attack. Despite the good immediate outcomes, his future functional prognosis might be poor, due to the advanced age, severe cardiovascular pathology and the complex disturbances of the neuro-myo-artro-kinetic apparatus (major impediments of the somatic / body functions and structure). This health-related condition had severe repercussions on the subject`s activity (related to tasks and basic activities of daily living) and participation, affecting the outcome of rehabilitation, and his quality of life. Conclusions: Clinicians should consider the remote risk of SEDH (even with atypical clinical presentation) in patients with AF and anticoagulant medication. Despite a postponed decompressive intervention (imposed by the severe comorbidities), our patient neurologically improved without recurrence, following a complex neurorehabilitation program

    Translation of the Fugl-Meyer assessment into Romanian: Transcultural and semantic-linguistic adaptations and clinical validation

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    PurposeThe Fugl-Meyer Assessment (FMA) scale, which is widely used and highly recommended, is an appropriate tool for evaluating poststroke sensorimotor and other possible somatic deficits. It is also well-suited for capturing a dynamic rehabilitation process. The aim of this study was to first translate the entire sensorimotor FMA scale into Romanian using the transcultural and semantic-linguistic adaptations of its official afferent protocols and to then validate it using the preliminary clinical evaluation of inter- and intra-rater reliability and relevant concurrent validity.MethodsThrough three main steps, we completed a standardized procedure for translating FMA's official afferent evaluation protocols into Romanian and their transcultural and semantic-linguistic adaptation for both the upper and lower extremities. For relevant clinical validation, we evaluated 10 patients after a stroke two times: on days 1 and 2. All patients were evaluated simultaneously by two kinesi-physiotherapists (generically referred to as KFT1 and KFT2) over the course of 2 consecutive days, taking turns in the roles of an examiner and observer, and vice versa (inter-rater). Two scores were therefore obtained and compared for the same patient, i.e., being afferent to an inter-rater assay by comparing the assessment outcomes obtained by the two kinesi-physiotherapists, in between, and respectively, to the intra-rater assay: based on the evaluations of the same kinesi-physiotherapist, in two consecutive days, using a rank-based method (Svensson) for statistical analysis. We also compared our final Romanian version of FMA's official protocols for concurrent validity (Spearman's rank correlation statistical method) to both of the widely available assessment instruments: the Barthel Index (BI) and the modified Rankin scale (mRS).ResultsSvensson's method confirmed overall good inter- and intra-rater results for the main parts of the final Romanian version of FMA's evaluation protocols, regarding the percentage of agreement (≥80% on average) and for disagreement: relative position [RP; values outside the interval of (−0.1, 0.1) in only two measurements out of the 56 comparisons we did], relative concentration [RC; values outside the interval of (−0.1, 0.1) in only nine measurements out of the same 56 comparisons done], and relative rank variation [RV; all values within an interval of (0, 0.1) in only five measurements out of the 56 comparisons done]. High correlation values were obtained between the final Romanian version of FMA's evaluation protocols and the BI (ρ = 0.9167; p = 0.0002) for FMA–upper extremity (FMA-UE) total A-D (motor function) with ρ = 0.6319 and for FMA-lower extremity (FMA-LE) total E-F (motor function) with p = 0.0499, and close to the limit, with the mRS (ρ = −0.5937; p = 0.0704) for FMA-UE total A-D (motor function) and (ρ = −0.6615; p = 0.0372) for FMA-LE total E-F (motor function).ConclusionsThe final Romanian version of FMA's official evaluation protocols showed good preliminary reliability and validity, which could be thus recommended for use and expected to help improve the standardization of this assessment scale for patients after a stroke in Romania. Furthermore, this endeavor could be added to similar international translation and cross-cultural adaptations, thereby facilitating a more appropriate comparison of the evaluation and outcomes in the management of stroke worldwide

    Telerehabilitation: A Practical Remote Alternative for Coaching and Monitoring Physical Kinetic Therapy in Patients with Mild and Moderate Disabling Parkinson’s Disease during the COVID-19 Pandemic

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    Background. The COVID-19 pandemic imposed social/physical distancing, lockdown measures, and forced reorientation of the rehabilitation programs for people with Parkinson’s disease (PD). Epidemiologic safety measures boosted remote exercise-based treatment. Objectives. Remote delivery of rehabilitation care services is not typically used in our department. Therefore, this study aimed to assess and implement a telehealth physical rehabilitation program tailored for outpatients with idiopathic PD and slight or medium functional limitations. Methods. A prospective study was performed on a group of outpatients with idiopathic PD, selected from the database of the neurorehabilitation clinic of the Emergency Teaching Hospital “Bagdasar-Arseni.” We studied 17 patients (5 women and 12 men), aged between 54-70 years (average 65.9 ± 4.87), with a disease history of 7.3 ± 3.6 (years), with mild or moderate disabling clinical forms, quantified by an average Hoehn and Yahr score of 2.3 ± 0.35 (limits 1.5-3). All patients underwent pharmacologic treatment with unchanged doses throughout the study. No patients had disabling osteoarticular problems (all could walk independently) and had no significant psycho-cognitive dysfunction. Patients were supervised and coached online in tandem by the therapist and physician. In addition, a family member assisted and supervised the patient’s performance and coordinated the technical electronic procedures. Walking biodynamics was assessed by timing “6-meters walking” and “Get up and walk 3 meters” (TUG) tests. Each person attended ten sessions of motor telerehabilitation procedures (2 per week) lasting 50 minutes each during social distancing (October-December 2021). Results. None of the patients was at increased risk of falling. They all improved their locomotor performance, reflected in a significant decrease in TUG duration (the initial average time improved from 13.50 seconds to 10.57). The telerehabilitation program also significantly improved the average walking speed (initially, 44.5 cm/sec and finally, it raised to 56.8 cm/sec). Discussion. The TUG and “6-meters walking” tests are helpful tools for a global biodynamic remote assessment of PD patients. Limitations of the study: a small group of selected patients, restrictive working conditions (due to epidemiological social/physical restrictions and no direct physiotherapist-patient contact), and need for supervision by an attendant to assist the subject and perform the audio-video transmission. Further studies are necessary to identify the optimal web-based model of care and boost the implementation of this modern neurorehabilitation concept. Conclusions. Telemedicine turned the virtual space into a new reality and may compensate for the restrictions imposed on face-to-face meetings in pandemic conditions. Moreover, with modern telecommunication techniques, a regular and individualized physical kinetic rehabilitation program can be performed even in pandemic conditions. Remote delivery of kinetic motor programs was appropriate for selected groups of PD patients

    Uncommon Association of Two Anatomical Variants of Cerebral Circulation: A Fetal-Type Posterior Cerebral Artery and Inferred Artery of Percheron, Complicated with Paramedian Thalamomesencephalic Stroke—Case Presentation and Literature Review

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    Background. The unilateral fetal variant of the posterior cerebral artery (FPCA) is characterized by the congenital absence of the P1 arterial segment. The artery of Percheron (AOP) is an uncommon vascular variant, in which a single dominant thalamoperforating arterial trunk arises from one P1 segment, bifurcates, and provides bilateral supply to the paramedian thalami and rostral midbrain. Case Presentation. This is a retrospective case study of a 37-year-old man with multiple lifestyle risk factors (chronic marijuana and tobacco abuse), who suffered a thalamomesencephalic stroke, rapidly worsening to comatose state. After restoration of consciousness, he clinically manifested with left paramedian midbrain syndrome. Imaging demonstrated an asymmetric paramedian thalamic infarction with mesencephalon extension, patency of the basilar, vertebral arteries, and left PCA and right-sided FPCA, respectively. Left-sided thalamoperforating arterioles were not differentiated; AOP was inferred. Neither evident clinical source of embolus nor prothrombotic states were found. Mobile cardiac telemetry and transesophageal echocardiography were not available. The diagnosis was established too late for thrombolytic treatment. Anticoagulation was indicated during the acute and subacute stages, followed by low dose of antiplatelet. Discussion. This uncommon cerebrovascular configuration (FPCA+AOP) might be the fourth case described in the literature. Sustained rehabilitation and abstinence from tobacco and cannabis led to favorable outcomes

    Secondary prevention of systemic arterial and recurrent venous thromboembolic events, through extended time anticoagulation with apixaban, in an elderly patient with multiple comorbidities

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    The clinical case illustrates the daily practice with an individualized, adjusted thromboprophylactic  dose of apixaban (2.5 mg twice-daily, follow-up for 20 months), mandatory indicated as a continuous therapy for secondary prevention of systemic arterial embolism and recurrent venous thromboembolic events, in an elderly obese patient, associating multiple pathological conditions (chronically anticoagulated for non valvular atrial fibrillation and stroke sequelae, multiple metabolic comorbidities such as type 2 diabetes mellitus , hyperuricemia, moderate renal insufficiency, hyperuricemia), who submitted a severe “unprovoked” phlegmasia alba dolens in the sound (left) lower limb, a decade after a (most possible) iatrogenic deep vein thrombosis at the paralyzed (right) limb.Thromboprophylaxis for an extended time, without any medical complications (neither systemic or venous thrombotic events, nor hemorrhagic ones) confirmed the product`s efficacy and safety profile. Physiopathological considerations and essential pharmacological considerations were discussed, focused on the individualized safe therapeutic approach. 

    Parkinson’s Disease and SARS-CoV-2 Infection: Particularities of Molecular and Cellular Mechanisms Regarding Pathogenesis and Treatment

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    Accumulating data suggest that chronic neuroinflammation-mediated neurodegeneration is a significant contributing factor for progressive neuronal and glial cell death in age-related neurodegenerative pathology. Furthermore, it could be encountered as long-term consequences in some viral infections, including post-COVID-19 Parkinsonism-related chronic sequelae. The current systematic review is focused on a recent question aroused during the pandemic’s successive waves: are there post-SARS-CoV-2 immune-mediated reactions responsible for promoting neurodegeneration? Does the host’s dysregulated immune counter-offensive contribute to the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases, emerging as Parkinson’s disease, in a complex interrelation between genetic and epigenetic risk factors? A synthetic and systematic literature review was accomplished based on the ”Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Principles Reviews and Meta-Analyses” (PRISMA) methodology, including registration on the specific online platform: International prospective register of systematic reviews—PROSPERO, no. 312183. Initially, 1894 articles were detected. After fulfilling the five steps of the selection methodology, 104 papers were selected for this synthetic review. Documentation was enhanced with a supplementary 47 bibliographic resources identified in the literature within a non-standardized search connected to the subject. As a final step of the PRISMA method, we have fulfilled a Population-Intervention-Comparison-Outcome-Time (PICOT)/Population-Intervention-Comparison-Outcome-Study type (PICOS)—based metanalysis of clinical trials identified as connected to our search, targeting the outcomes of rehabilitative kinesitherapeutic interventions compared to clinical approaches lacking such kind of treatment. Accordingly, we identified 10 clinical trials related to our article. The multi/interdisciplinary conventional therapy of Parkinson’s disease and non-conventional multitarget approach to an integrative treatment was briefly analyzed. This article synthesizes the current findings on the pathogenic interference between the dysregulated complex mechanisms involved in aging, neuroinflammation, and neurodegeneration, focusing on Parkinson’s disease and the acute and chronic repercussions of COVID-19. Time will tell whether COVID-19 neuroinflammatory events could trigger long-term neurodegenerative effects and contribute to the worsening and/or explosion of new cases of PD. The extent of the interrelated neuropathogenic phenomenon remains obscure, so further clinical observations and prospective longitudinal cohort studies are needed

    Cellular and Molecular Targets for Non-Invasive, Non-Pharmacological Therapeutic/Rehabilitative Interventions in Acute Ischemic Stroke

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    BACKGROUND: Cerebral circulation delivers the blood flow to the brain through a dedicated network of sanguine vessels. A healthy human brain can regulate cerebral blood flow (CBF) according to any physiological or pathological challenges. The brain is protected by its self-regulatory mechanisms, which are dependent on neuronal and support cellular populations, including endothelial ones, as well as metabolic, and even myogenic factors. OBJECTIVES: Accumulating data suggest that “non-pharmacological” approaches might provide new opportunities for stroke therapy, such as electro-/acupuncture, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, hypothermia/cooling, photobiomodulation, therapeutic gases, transcranial direct current stimulations, or transcranial magnetic stimulations. We reviewed the recent data on the mechanisms and clinical implications of these non-pharmaceutical treatments. METHODS: To present the state-of-the-art for currently available non-invasive, non-pharmacological-related interventions in acute ischemic stroke, we accomplished this synthetic and systematic literature review based on the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Principles Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA). RESULTS: The initial number of obtained articles was 313. After fulfilling the five steps in the filtering/selection methodology, 54 fully eligible papers were selected for synthetic review. We enhanced our documentation with other bibliographic resources connected to our subject, identified in the literature within a non-standardized search, to fill the knowledge gaps. Fifteen clinical trials were also identified. DISCUSSION: Non-invasive, non-pharmacological therapeutic/rehabilitative interventions for acute ischemic stroke are mainly holistic therapies. Therefore, most of them are not yet routinely used in clinical practice, despite some possible beneficial effects, which have yet to be supplementarily proven in more related studies. Moreover, few of the identified clinical trials are already completed and most do not have final results. CONCLUSIONS: This review synthesizes the current findings on acute ischemic stroke therapeutic/rehabilitative interventions, described as non-invasive and non-pharmacological

    Topical Cellular/Tissue and Molecular Aspects Regarding Nonpharmacological Interventions in Alzheimer’s Disease—A Systematic Review

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    One of the most complex and challenging developments at the beginning of the third millennium is the alarming increase in demographic aging, mainly—but not exclusively—affecting developed countries. This reality results in one of the harsh medical, social, and economic consequences: the continuously increasing number of people with dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease (AD), which accounts for up to 80% of all such types of pathology. Its large and progressive disabling potential, which eventually leads to death, therefore represents an important public health matter, especially because there is no known cure for this disease. Consequently, periodic reappraisals of different therapeutic possibilities are necessary. For this purpose, we conducted this systematic literature review investigating nonpharmacological interventions for AD, including their currently known cellular and molecular action bases. This endeavor was based on the PRISMA method, by which we selected 116 eligible articles published during the last year. Because of the unfortunate lack of effective treatments for AD, it is necessary to enhance efforts toward identifying and improving various therapeutic and rehabilitative approaches, as well as related prophylactic measures
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