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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (hemiplegia)
3,997 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Between December 1985 and July 1986 a study on cerebral palsy was undertaken among the inpatients and outpatients of the department of Paediatrics and Child Health, Muhimbili Medical Centre Centre, Dar Es Salaam. The objective of the study was to determine the clinical pattern of cerebral palsy and its associated handicaps. During this period, 100 children with cerebral palsy 56 boys and 44 girls ranging in age between four months and 10 years were seen. The commonest type of cerebral palsy seen was spastic tetraplegia which occurred in 36 percent of the cases followed by spastic diplegia and hemiplegia seen in 20 and 15 percent of the cases respectively. In 70 children the cerebral palsy was associated with other severe handicaps, the commonest being epilepsy which occurred in 35 percent of the children followed by deafness, speech disorders and blindness. Birth asphyxia, convulsions of undetermined causes, low birth weight, meningitis and cerebral birth trauma were found to be the leading causes of cerebral palsy. As these conditions are largely preventable or amendable to treatment, it is suggested that improvement of antenatal and perinatal care is important in the reduction of the incidence of cerebral palsy.
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PMID:Cerebral palsy in Dar Es Salaam. 239 97

Forty-five of 47 low birthweight infants (less than 2.5 kg b.w.) from a 2 1/2-year period surviving after ventilator treatment in the neonatal period were studied. The children were assessed at the age of 6-7 years by neurological examination and Griffith's test. There were 2 children with diplegia, and one with a descrete hemiplegia. Eleven other children had minor motor disturbances. Fifteen children had short attention span. In the Griffith's test 8 had a general quotient below 3; most often because of low scores in the Locomotor scale and the Performance scales. Eight children had minor motor difficulties and short attention span in combination. These eight children together with the three patients with cerebral palsy, another four patients with low Griffith test and one girl with severe retrolental fibroplasia, and one girl with neurogenic hearing reduction could be at risk for later school difficulties (38%). Finally, one boy was successfully shunted for hydrocephalus. The abnormalities found did not correlate with birthweight or duration of ventilator treatment.
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PMID:Longterm follow-up of ventilator treated low birthweight infants. II. Neurological and psychological outcome at 6-7 years. 243 36

The purpose of this study was to explore changes in body sensation through muscular relaxation by means of measurement of tactile two-point limen. This study comprised two experiments. The first experiment, in which twenty female college students participated, was carried out to examine the effect of relaxation on two-point limen, and the relationship between the acceptance of relaxation and two-point limen. The second experiment involved three physically handicapped children with cerebral palsy and hemiplegia. To determine whether they would show a decrease in two-point limen in the shoulders and forearms as a function of improvement of relaxation, they were given a week long intensive Motor Action Training, which was administered by means of the relaxation and movement training method established by Naruse. The results showed that the two-point limen decreased remarkably for both normal adult subjects and physically handicapped subjects as they relaxed muscular tension. Concerning the acceptance of relaxation, the high acceptance group showed a large decrease in the two-point limen, whereas the low acceptance group did not show any change.
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PMID:[Changes of body sensation through muscular relaxation: using the method of measuring tactile two-point limen]. 253 38

A retrospective review was undertaken of 10 years experience in a Regional referral centre for cardiothoracic surgery identified 37 children with cardiovascular disease who developed chronic neurological handicap. In two-thirds of these, neurological lesions occurred in association with cardiovascular surgery, whilst in one-third they were unrelated to surgery. Motor handicap was found in the majority (94 per cent) of cases, with hemiplegia, tetraplegia and paraplegia being the most common patterns. In half the children, motor and intellectual function was severely impaired. Neurological complications of cardiovascular disease account for approximately two per cent of children with cerebral palsy in the area served by our hospital. One per cent of children undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass surgery risk chronic neurological handicap. Potentially avoidable factors could only be identified in a small proportion of cases.
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PMID:Neurological complications of heart disease in childhood. 259 2

From the changing incidence of cerebral palsy (CP) in the Tottori joint study, the absolute number of saved non-CP babies in the period 1955-1984 in the whole of Japan was calculated as about 33,000. The significant decrease of the incidence in the period 1955-1980 was mainly related to the advances made in perinatal medicine. In contrast, the recent reincrease is attributable to low-birth-weight CP. As for the risk factors for quadriplegia or double hemiplegia of CP, maternal toxemia, low Apgar scores and neonatal abnormal signs were important. Diplegia and paraplegia were significantly correlated with low birth weight. Among the babies weighing below 2,000 g, there was a more than 40-fold increased risk of CP compared with that in the general population. As for the risk for low-birth-weight diplegic CP, the number of abnormal signs in the neonatal period is correlated with the brain damage. The next step in preventing perinatal brain damage might be to give more attention to fetal deprivation and to well-balanced and sensible neonatal care of risk babies.
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PMID:Cerebral palsy in Tottori, Japan. Benefits and risks of progress in perinatal medicine. 275 49

A retrospective study examined early neurodevelopmental behaviors of children with spastic diplegia, spastic hemiplegia, and quadriplegia (spastic, athetoid, or mixed) who had been followed up longitudinally in a high-risk infant follow-up clinic. Compared with peers with normal outcomes, children with all three types of cerebral palsy had significantly lower scores on the Bayley Mental Scale at 4 months of age; children with hemiplegia and quadriplegia also scored significantly lower on the Bayley Motor Scale. On the Movement Assessment of Infants at 4 months of age, the children with hemiplegia and quadriplegia showed significantly higher risk scores than the nonhandicapped group. The Movement Assessment of Infants was more than three times as sensitive as the Bayley Motor Scale in detecting motor abnormalities in 4-month-old infants with diplegia and more than twice as sensitive in detecting early abnormalities of hemiplegia. At 1 year of age, however, the Bayley Motor Scale was extremely sensitive in picking up motor deficits in children with all three types of cerebral palsy.
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PMID:Early diagnosis of spastic diplegia, spastic hemiplegia, and quadriplegia. 169 34

The reduction of working ability, because of disease, was considered in 1,053 subjects. 21 groups of maladies were found; the neurological disease and mental retardation (MR) caused various degrees of working inability in 416 subjects, i.e. in the 39.51% of the examined population; orthopaedic changes affected the 15.57% of the patients; psychic disorders determined some inability in 8.93% of the persons. The subjects unable to work receive, by Law, an economic help. This study was limited to neurological patients and to subjects mentally retarded. The working ability was reduced by 5 types of disturbances: neuromotor pathology, mental retardation, mental deterioration and dementia, epilepsy, other neurological diseases. The neuromotor pathology affected 163 subjects; the types of symptomatology: hemiplegia; it was found in 71 patients; 62 times it was the result of cerebrovascular disease; in 4 patients it was caused by a hypoxic-ischaemic pre-perinatal encephalopathy. 43 patients affected by cerebrovascular disease lost their personal autonomy, i.e. they could no longer do the activities of daily living (ADL); 7 patients lost their working ability; 12 subjects kept some ability to work. The hemiplegias which struck after 50 years of age were caused by cerebrovascular disease; paraplegia: 28 paraplegic patients have been seen; the aetiology was: poliomyelitis in 8 subjects; MS in 5 patients; ALS in 2 patients; in 13 patients the aetiology was unknown. 6 patients resulted unable to work; 8 persons kept some working ability; 14 patients lost the ability to do the ADL; tetraplegia, or double/bilateral hemiplegia, was found in 20 patients; the aetiology: poliomyelitis in 4 patients; pre-perinatal hypoxic ischaemic encephalopathy in 4 patients; 3 patients of MS; lesion of the cervical spinal cord because of breech delivery in 2 patients; the aetiology was not known in 7 persons. The ability to do the ADL was lost in 17 patients; 3 subjects kept some working ability. Double or bilateral hemiplegia (Little disease) was the model of neuromotor deficit subsequent natal encephalopathy (Infantile Cerebral Palsy, PCI); brachial plexus paralysis was only found from obstetrical (i.e. natal) origin; poliomyelitis and PKU resulted prevented as of 10 years. Mental Retardation (MR) was considered a borderline pathology between neurology and psychiatry; it included 162 subjects: in patients with severe MR a pre-perinatal hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy was found in 40.4% of the cases; in patients affected by moderate or light MR the same encephalopathy was found in the 11.3% of the subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Neurologic diseases, mental retardation and reduction in work capacity]. 293 89

Children with and without spastic hemiplegia were identified among a representative sample of 1048 low-birthweight survivors by clinical assessment after three years of age. The hypothesis that hemiplegia was predetermined at birth was tested by estimating the probability of hemiplegia for each infant by logistic regression analysis, using data from hospital records on conditions known at the time of birth. 16 of 42 children with cerebral palsy had spastic hemiplegia. Allowing for the lower birthweights of hemiplegic children, increased prevalence was associated with previous reproductive loss, breech vaginal delivery, later birth-order, prolonged second stage of delivery, emergency caesarean section, and low Apgar scores. These variables identified correctly most children as having a higher or lower estimated probability of hemiplegia. Hemiplegia was also associated with prolonged respiratory disease and intraventricular haemorrhage. In this population it is likely that intrapartum events were closely related to the pathogenesis of hemiplegia; their effects may have been mediated by postnatal events.
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PMID:Cerebral palsy in low-birthweight infants. I. Spastic hemiplegia: associations with intrapartum stress. 337 63

Twenty children with spastic diplegia were identified by clinical assessment among a representative cohort of 1048 survivors with a birthweight of 2000g or less. Data from hospital case-records were used to investigate which perinatal conditions might differentiate infants with diplegia from other low-birthweight survivors. Even allowing for a strong association with lower gestational age, diplegic children were more likely to have suffered respiratory disease, necrotising enterocolitis and fits in the neonatal period, than children without cerebral palsy. Among preterm infants, diplegia differed from hemiplegia mainly in a lack of significant association with recorded maternal characteristics and markers of intrapartum stress. Important determinants of diplegia were not identified, but the results suggest that infants born both immature and relatively immature for their gestational age have the highest risk of diplegia. Factors that influence the rate of fetal development may be implicated in the aetiology of diplegia in both preterm and fullterm infants.
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PMID:Cerebral palsy in low-birthweight infants. II. Spastic diplegia: associations with fetal immaturity. 337 67

887 neonates at risk, referred to our neonatal unit underwent serial cranial ultrasound examinations and neurological follow-up over a period of 2 years. Our study focused on the prognosis of hemorrhagic and hypoxic-ischemic intracranial lesions. 194 patients with hemorrhages (subependymal hemorrhages [SEH] I degree-IV degrees according to Papile, hemorrhages of the choroid plexus [CPH], primarily intraparenchymal hemorrhages [PIH]) and/or hypoxic-ischemic lesions (infarcts of the major intracranial arteries and lesions of the periventricular white matter) were neurologically followed-up 12 to 24 months postnatally. A group of 266 patients with normal ultrasound scans out of the same population was equally followed-up and served as a control group. At the age of 12 months a preliminary neurodevelopmental diagnosis was made and the patients were divided into 3 groups. Group N (normal) had a normal neuromotor outcome, group S (suspect) showed minor neurological abnormalities without evidence of cerebral palsy and/or a developmental quotient between 80 and 90. Group A (abnormal) included patients with any degree of cerebral palsy (CP) and/or a development quotient below 80. A normal neurological outcome was seen in 88.3% of patients without intracranial lesion and in a comparable proportion of patients with SEH I degree (88.9%), SEH II degrees (84.8%) and CPH (81.3%). Patients with SEH III degrees developed normally in 72.7%, whereas only 25% of patients with SEH IV degrees and PIH were neurological normal at 12 months of age. For detailed statistical evaluation only preterm neonates (birthweight below 2500 grms) with and without hemorrhagic lesions were compared. Concerning the neurological short-term outcome our analysis revealed no statistically significant difference between patients with SEH I degrees, II degrees, III degrees, CPH and the control group. SEH IV degrees and PIH showed a unfavourable outcome. Only 2/8 surviving patients had a normal development, but small numbers of patients made a statistical analysis impossible. Two children with infarcts of the middle cerebral artery developed spastic hemiplegia of the contralateral body side. One child with an infarct of the posterior cerebral artery developed normally until the age of 1 year, but could not be followed-up further. Patients with periventricular lesions showed a normal neuromotor development in 88.9% and 75% when they had solitary periventricular cysts or wedge-shaped periventricular lesions, whereas none of 9 children who suffered from extensive cystic periventricular leucomalacia was neurologically normal at the age of 1 year.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Hemorrhagic and hypoxic-ischemic intracranial lesions in neonates diagnosed by realtime sonography: incidence and short-term outcome. 338 14


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