As many as 33.75% of patients with proximal upper limb deficiency rejected their prostheses and many who continue to wear them do not find them useful in ADL and employment, etc. It is vital that rehabilitation programmes should focus on both prosthetic and nonprosthetic training to achieve maximal independence.
Five clinical tests in common use for diagnosis of carpal tunnel syndromes have been shown to have little diagnostic value, either individually or in various combinations. No physical sign is useful in the diagnosis of this condition, which should be suspected on the basis of presenting symptoms and confirmed by electrodiagnosis using standard median nerve conduction tests.
There is no published literature detailing the demographics of paediatric amputations in the United Kingdom. We performed this review of children and adolescents referred to a regional limb-fitting centre from the 1930s to the current decade who suffered amputation as a result of trauma, and compared our data with similar cohorts from other units. Of the 93 patients included, only 11 were injured in the last 20 years. Road traffic accidents accounted for 63% of traumatic amputations. Of all amputations, 81% were in the lower limb and 19% in the upper limb. Our figures are similar to those from a United Kingdom national statistical database of amputees which showed on average four traumatic amputee referrals to each regional limb-fitting centre in the United Kingdom per ten-year period. Compared with the United States, the incidence of paediatric traumatic amputations in the United Kingdom is low.
having a BMI #30 (p,0.017). Coronary artery calcium scores did not predict EPC growth (p=0.90). Biochemically, NADPH oxidase-2 protein expression was found to be higher in EPCs of patients with CAD compared to those without (p=0.02), but there were no significant differences in other redox proteins assessed. In EPC angiogenesis assays, male patients with CAD were found to have significantly increased migration compared to those without CAD (p=0.024). Conclusion: EPCs show differential redox signalling and migration in association with CAD, but no difference in spontaneous growth rates was detected.
This clinical note describes an unusual and previously unreported complication of wearing a myoelectric prosthesis in a child with congenital upper limb deficiency. After an initial period of wearing a cosmetic prosthesis, he was provided with a child's trans-radial myoelectric prosthesis with a Steeper Scamp Electric hand at the age of 21 months. After successful and uncomplicated use of this prosthesis for 2 years--a sudden onset of burns of the skin of the stump underlying the single electrode site was noted. The cause of the burns was thought to be due to heat generated from electrical failure possibly from ingress of moisture. This complication has not before been experienced in the authors' centre, nor has it been reported in the literature. While constant improvements are being made in the field of electrically powered prosthesis, the rehabilitation team should be aware of this unusual complication.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.