Subjects with subacute motor incomplete spinal cord injury reached a higher level of independent walking after over-ground training, compared with body weight-supported treadmill training. More randomized controlled trials are needed to clarify the effectiveness of body weight-supported gait training on walking, activities of daily living, and quality of life for subgroups of persons with an incomplete spinal cord injury.
Study design: Retrospective descriptive study. Objectives: (1) To obtain an overall appraisal of patients with epidural metastatic spinal cord compression (SCC) (1) Clinical records were reviewed and demographic, clinical and functional data were collected according to a protocol. The date of admittance to the SCU, rehabilitation goals, date of discharge and date of death were recorded. (2) The odds ratio (OR) was calculated for all determinants on admittance to the SCU in order to find indicators that predict survival 41 year after discharge from the SCU. An OR X2 was considered to be clinically significant. Results: In total, 131 patients with epidural metastatic SCC were admitted. In all, 117 clinical records were retrieved and 97 clinical records provided complete data. The average age on admittance was 58 years. Among the patients 53% were male. The average Barthel score on admittance was 7.2/20 points. The average length of stay in the SCU was 104 days (3-336). Overall, 66% of the patients were discharged. The average Barthel score on discharge was 12.0 points. The average survival after discharge was 808 (0-3669) days. During their stay on the SCU, seven patients died. At 1 year after discharge, 52% of the patients were still alive. These patients suffered less complications, had been admitted less often to a hospital during rehabilitation, had made better functional progress and had been discharged home more often. A survival 41 year after discharge is related to ASIA D (OR 4.3), MRC 4 and 5 (OR 5.4), tumour in remission (OR 3.8) and independence or partial independence on the Barthel items: dressing (OR 4.3) and making transfers (OR 5.0). Conclusions: Patients with epidural metastatic SCC may benefit from in-patient rehabilitation.
Introduction Cardiometabolic health has a growing relevance in spinal cord injury (SCI) considering the increasing survival and aging population. We explored longitudinal changes in cardiometabolic risk profile and examined whether injury characteristics could be a non-modifiable risk factor for individuals with SCI in subacute phase of the injury. Methods We used the data from a multicenter Swiss Spinal Cord Injury Cohort (SwiSCI) study and included adults with traumatic SCI (TSCI) without cardiometabolic diseases and diabetes at baseline. We included individuals with available data on admission and prior to discharge from first SCI rehabilitation. Blood pressure, lipid profile, fasting glucose, waist circumference (WC), weight, and body mass index (BMI) were compared according to the injury level (tetraplegia-TP vs paraplegia-PP) and completeness (motor complete-COM vs incomplete-INC). We used multivariable linear regression for cross-sectional analysis and linear mixed models for longitudinal analysis, adjusting for age, sex, lifestyle factors, medication-use, and injury characteristics. We performed age- (above and below median age) and sex-stratified analyses. Sensitivity analyses were also performed by removing systemic steroid-use (proxy for acute injury), adjusting for opioid-use (medication side-effect) and adjusting further for BMI and WC. Results We analyzed 258 individuals with TSCI (110 TP and 148 PP, 122 COM and 136 INC). Median age was 50 years (IQR 32–60), with 76.36% (n=197) of the population being male. The median rehabilitation duration was 5.5 months (IQR 3.2–7.1). On admission, the fully-adjusted models showed higher baseline weight, systolic BP, diastolic BP and triglycerides in PP than TP. Systolic BP, diastolic BP, HDL, HDL/LDL were higher in INC than COM. In the overall population, we observed increases in cholesterol, HDL, and HDL/LDL ratio over rehabilitation period. Individuals with PP had a higher increase in BMI as compared to TT, while no differences were detected when comparing INC and COM injury (Table 1–3). Results from sensitivity analyses were generally in line with the overall findings; however, at baseline, there was some indication that lipid profile may be different in COM and INC injury. In sex-stratified longitudinal analysis, triglycerides were higher in females PP than TP, and diastolic BP was higher in females with INC than COM. For age-stratified longitudinal analysis, elderly with PP have higher triglycerides than younger adults. Conclusion We reported changes in BMI and lipid profile during the inpatient rehabilitation of individuals with traumatic SCI and without history of cardiovascular diseases and diabetes. Injury characteristics may not be an independent risk factor for subacute phase, but maybe important in specific subgroups, like in women and in the elderly (>50 years old). FUNDunding Acknowledgement Type of funding sources: None. Methods Results
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