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... variety of conditions, including orthopedic complications, post fractures, joint replacement, neurological disease or injury, strokes, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, and spinal cord injuries. The average inpatient stay is 13 to 14 days, ...
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... Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom (OIF/OEF). Common sources of pain are in the head (traumatic-brain injury or post-concussion syndrome), legs (fractures, amputations, burns) and shoulders. Other physical injuries include spinal-cord and ...
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... Owsley Brown Frazier Chair in Neurological Rehabilitation, rehabilitation director at the university's Kentucky Spinal Cord Injury Research Center (KSCIRC) and the director of research at Frazier Rehab Institute, is evaluating how to translate into ...
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... deaths had those conditions. Cerebral palsy is a group of disorders that cause physical disability that occur due to injury or abnormalities of the brain. Cerebral refers to the cerebrum, the largest part of the brain and the part most commonly ...
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... tions that are evaluated by a physician are eligible for Lokomat therapy. Additional Information Sara Klaas Director, Spinal Cord Injury Service Shriners Hospitals for Children (773) 385-5448
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... knowledge that their bids will help support a private nonprofit that offers compassionate care to those stricken by spinal cord injuries and diseases; acquired brain injury; multiple sclerosis; and other neuromuscular diseases and urological ...
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... us to become more spiritual, benevolent and wholesome. For others, it begins as a cathartic healing process after an injury. For lifelong crafters, such as myself, adapting our craft to our disability creates a new dimension of art. No matter if you ...
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The intriguing gecko lizard - known for shedding a tail that can flip, jump and lunge even after it's severed - could shine a new light on how humans with spinal cord injuries might regain loss of movement.
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... require any form of medical intervention or the taking of any drugs. Additionally the BioEDEN process, when compared to cord blood collection for example, offers more than a one-off opportunity to collect these precious cells. Stem cells can be ...
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... Owsley Brown Frazier Chair in Neurological Rehabilitation, rehabilitation director at the university's Kentucky Spinal Cord Injury Research Center (KSCIRC) and the director of research at Frazier Rehab Institute, is evaluating how to translate into ...
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... safety seats, to pass laws to get parents to use them. "For five- to eight-year-olds the leading cause of death and injury is still motor vehicles," says Heather Taylor, an injury prevention specialist for the Coconino County Health Department. ...
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... community. Experts believe that the cells may one day help cure or treat debilitating injuries and diseases, such as spinal cord injury, Parkinson's disease and diabetes - although a significant amount of research must be done first. 'Texas-U.K. ...
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... a result of immaturity of the spine. The journal says rotational manipulation of the cervical spine and high-velocity spinal manipulations are especially risky for kids. A case series featured in the journal presented three cases of dislocated atlas ...
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... for time periods ranging from hours to years. When the electrodes are implanted, the brain first reacts to the acute injury with an inflammatory response. Then the brain settles into a wound-healing, or chronic, response. It's during this secondary ...
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... is caused by dysfunction of the somatosensory system resulting from abnormal nociceptive pathway signaling or nerve injury. There are a number of disease states that lead to NeP including: diabetes, multiple sclerosis (MS), cancer, spinal cord ...
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Is body temperature fluctuations normal with spinal cord injuries? 09/29/09 tomandtab Topics: Temperature regulation problems I was diagnosed with Transverse Myelitis L3 Paraplegic about two years ago.
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... for time periods ranging from hours to years. When the electrodes are implanted, the brain first reacts to the acute injury with an inflammatory response. Then the brain settles into a wound-healing, or chronic, response. It's during this secondary ...
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