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Robotic therapy expands recovery window for stroke patients

By Kristen Minogue | December 3, 2008

With the help of new robotic training, victims of stroke may be able to extend the narrow six-month window to regain their mobility, according to a recent study presented at the RSNA conference Wednesday.

Between 80% and 90% of stroke survivors experience motion problems, according Dr. A. Aria Tzika, director of the NMR Surgical Laboratory at Massachusetts General Hospital. Almost two-thirds of stroke survivors can't use the affected hand in their everyday activities after six months.

"We believed that the critical period is the first three to six months after stroke during which restructuring or neuroplasticity can take place," said Tzika. "Now we see that actually the brain is adaptable to rehabilitation."

Tzika and a team of researchers examined five patients who had strokes affecting right-hand use at least six months prior to the study.

Tzika and her colleagues first used a dynamometer to calculate each patient's total hand strength. Then they gave them plastic balls stiff enough to engage about 75% of their full strength. Participants went through an in-home training session that involved squeezing the ball for one hour a day, three days a week.

Patients came in for testing four times throughout the study: before, during, and immediately after the training, and one month after training ended to see if the effects lasted.

During testing, the patients gripped a robotic device called an MR_CHIROD that researchers could control to employ 45% or 60% of the subjects' full strength.

Tzika said they opted for the more complex machinery instead of simple plastic balls for testing because it offered researchers more precise control over the patients' movement.

"This device is set to a particular setting so we can control their training," she said.

As patients gripped the device, an fMRI scan monitored their brain activity.

The researchers discovered that brain activity in the area that controlled hand use went up and stayed up, even after patients had stopped training for four weeks.

Tzika said the success with motor skills offers the possibility that appropriate tasks could rehabilitate lost verbal or memory skills

Motor activity in the brain at 40% (top) and 60% (bottom) of full strength, before, immediately after, and four weeks after training. Even after training had ceased for a month, the part of the brain controlling hand movement remained just as active as immediately after the training stopped.
 

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RSNA 2008 December 3

High coronary calcium scores up the risk of coronary events
December 3, 2009

Adding coronary calcium to the assessment of conventional cardiovascular risk factors leads to substantial improvement in cardiovascular risk classification of asymptomatic men and women, according to a study presented at the RSNA on Wednesday afternoon.

Mammo image enhancer aims for OEMs at RSNA 2009
December 3, 2009

RSNA newbie Real-Time Tomography launched at this year’s meeting a new image processing and enhancement software library for digital mammography.

Gamma imaging picks up cancer unseen by mammograms
December 3, 2008

Out of every 10 women whose mammogram or physical exam reveals potentially cancerous cells in their breasts, approximately three of them will have additional dangerous clusters the examinations missed, according to a recent study presented at the RSNA conference Wednesday.

Radiologists identify new self-embedding disorder plaguing teens
December 3, 2008

A new kind of self-mutilation is creeping into the teenage population, one that involves inserting objects into the body, according to radiologist Dr. William E. Shiels, II, who presented the first study of the adolescent phenomenon at the RSNA conference Wednesday.

Robotic therapy expands recovery window for stroke patients
December 3, 2008

With the help of new robotic training, victims of stroke may be able to extend the narrow six-month window to regain their mobility, according to a recent study presented at the RSNA conference Wednesday.

Breast-specific gamma imaging shows better sensitivity than other methods
December 3, 2008

Breast-specific gamma imaging demonstrates better specificity and sensitivity than mammography, ultrasound, and MRI, according to several studies presented at the RSNA meeting.

Studies attest to prognostic value of coronary CTA
December 3, 2008

In response to demands for evidence that cardiac CT will positively affect patient outcomes, researchers presented results at the RSNA conference Wednesday attesting to its value for identifying which intermediate risk patients are most likely to suffer future catastrophic coronary events.

CT bests ultrasound for diagnosing ER patients with abdominal pain
December 3, 2008

The news was mixed for CT in the emergency department in research presented Wednesday at the RSNA meeting. CT was found to be better than ultrasound for diagnosing ER patients with abdominal pain, but radiation dose can be drastically reduced for patients suspected of appendicitis, according to authors of several studies.

Single fast MR sequence for knee osteoarthritis captures imagination of MSK rads
December 3, 2008

A new 3D, fast spin-echo MR sequence at 3T could one day help musculoskeletal radiologists perform a comprehensive evaluation of articular cartilage of the knee in only five minutes, according to researchers from Wisconsin and California.

Imaging utilization rises where radiology presence drops
December 3, 2008

Rates of diagnostic imaging utilization varied by more than 56% across the 10 Medicare regions of the U.S., according to a study presented Wednesday. The regions with the highest utilization had the lowest percentage of imaging services provided by radiologists.

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