Children's Hemiplegia
WHAT IS HEMIPLEGIA?
The technical definition of Hemiplegia is: paralysis of one side of the body. Hemiplegia is paralysis on one full side of the body including the arm, trunk and leg. The most common cause is stroke. Hemiplegia occurs when there is a disruption of blood flow to the brain, causing part of the brain to die. Spastic Hemiplegia affects one side of the body with increased tendon reflexes and spasms occurring in the affected muscles.
The side affected by Hemiplegia depends on which side the brain is affected. If someone has a right side orientated stroke they will have left side Hemiplegia and vice versa. The degree of disability depends on the degree of neurological damage. In all cases of Hemiplegia if the brain damage occurs before, during or after birth up to the age of 2 it is then considered cerebral palsy.
TREATMENTS OF HEMIPLEGIA
Treatment of spastic Hemiplegia (Hemiparesis) of the upper extremity generally follows a conservative to aggressive therapy schedule that starts physical therapy and occupational therapy and may progress to such treatments as serial casting, botox, and tendon lengthening or transfer. Individual patient treatment for children with Spastic Hemiplegia take into consideration their developmental milestones, growth spurts and the severity of the disability.
CAUSES OF HEMIPLEGIA
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Brain Injury (car accidents, bike accident, ect...)
Kidsource Online -
Blood clots
The Blood Clot Center -
CVA - Cerebrovascular Accident (Thrombus, Embolism, Hemorrhages)
Medline Plus Health Information - CVA -
Infections - Encephalitis, Meningitis or Subdural Empyema (an abcess)
TIA - Transient Ischemic Attack (Mini Stroke)
NINDS TIA Information Page -
Vasculitis
What is Vasculitis?
INFORMATIONAL SITES
Congenital Hemiplegia
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First Flex - For Children with Spastic Hemiplegia
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HandiCare Bilanx - The perfect Wheelchair for Hemiplegics
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Steering Devices - Driving & Hand Controls
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WALK EASY - Assistant for "Drop Foot"
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Wonder Buttons - Cuff Extenders
Motor Firing
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Time-course analysis of motor unit firing patterns in stroke patients using noninvasive multielectrode electromyography LINK
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Ordered Motor-Unit Firing Behavior in Acute Cerebellar Stroke LINK
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Stroke patients have selective muscle weakness in shortened range LINK
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Analysis of motor unit firing patterns in patients with central or peripheral lesions using singular-value decomposition LINK
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Weakness and strength training in persons with poststroke hemiplegia: Rationale, method, and efficacy LINK
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Sensory Motor Performance Program LINK
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