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4. Central evoked potentials

Cassvan, A; Pease, WS; MacLean, IC; Ma, DM; Johnson, EW
This self-directed learning module highlights advances in the use of evoked potentials of the central nervous system. It is a section of the chapter on electrodiagnosis for the Self-Directed Medical Knowledge Program Study Guide for practitioners and trainees in physical medicine and rehabilitation. This section contains information regarding responses evoked by visual, auditory, and somatosensory stimulation. Reviewed are electrode placements for recording; instrumentation requirements, including amplifiers, filters, averaging, and signal storage; and common technical errors. The evoked response often assists in the anatomic and physiologic localization of pathology. Precise neural generation of some signals remains under debate. The discussion includes the use of these responses in central nervous system disease and trauma, including coma and brain death. The presence of the eighth nerve response due to auditory stimulation with absent brainstem responses suggests a grave prognosis. Intraoperative monitoring using somatosensory evoked potentials and, recently, motor potentials during scoliosis surgery is becoming a routine procedure. Somatosensory evoked potential studies are also useful in the evaluation of sensory neuropathies and proximal peripheral nerve abnormalities. The use of mechanical stimuli in somatosensory studies allows evaluation of specific sensory receptors and conduction pathways. Recently, cortical potentials related to voluntary activity and cognitive function have been evaluated. This area offers much promise in the understanding of neuromuscular control and in neuropsychiatry.
SCOPUS:0023278157
ISSN: 0003-9993
CID: 585332

1. Needle electromyography

Ma, DM; Pease, WS; MacLean, IC; Cassvan, A; Johnson, EW
This self-directed learning module highlights advances in the needle electromyographic (EMG) examination. It is a section of the chapter on electrodiagnosis for the Self-Directed Medical Knowledge Program Study Guide for practitioners and trainees in physical medicine and rehabilitation. This section contains referenced information regarding instrumentation and safety, spontaneous muscle activity, motor unit assessment in normal and pathologic states, single fiber EMG, and macro EMG. The electrical character of motor units is related to strength, age, fatigue, the histochemical type of the motor unit, and the particular muscle. Abnormal motor unit potentials can usually but not always be interpreted as neuropathic or myopathic, according to their distinguishing features, including satellite potentials. Myotonic potentials are distinguished from complex repetitive discharges, which single fiber EMG studies demonstrate as ephaptic transmission between muscle fibers. Myokymia and fasciculations are phenomena that can be clincally observed. Their EMG characteristics and pathophysiology are reviewed. Single fiber EMG study of neuromuscular junction disease and reinnervation states has improved understanding of these problems and can be used as an objective test of therapeutic response. Review herein of the proper use of filters and electrodes for best signal measurement emphasizes potential sources of error.
SCOPUS:0023227609
ISSN: 0003-9993
CID: 585342

3. Late responses

Cassvan, A; Pease, WS; MacLean, IC; Ma, DM; Johnson, EW
This self-directed learning module highlights advances in late responses in nerve conduction testing. It is a section of the chapter on electrodiagnosis for the Self-Directed Medical Knowledge Program Study Guide for practitioners and trainees in physical medicine and rehabilitation. This section contains information regarding the H reflex, F wave, axon wave, and blink reflex in normal and pathologic states. The H reflex and F wave can often be elicited from the same motor nerve but are distinguished by amplitude and variability of response as well as by stimulation parameters required to evoke them. Both responses allow study of the entire length of a nerve, especially the otherwise inaccessible proximal plexus and intraspinal nerve segments. They are essential in the evaluation of neuropathic diseases. The axon wave is of shorter latency than the F wave and results from proximal axonal sprouting, often in an area of chronic nerve injury due to compression or chronic polyneuropathy with reinnervation. The blink reflex permits study of the facial and supraorbital nerves throughout their length, including their complex brainstem synapses. Technical aspects of all tests are carefully reviewed, and the reader is advised to practice these difficult techniques before applying them in diagnostic situations.
SCOPUS:0023195915
ISSN: 0003-9993
CID: 585352

2. Peripheral evoked potentials

MacLean, IC; Pease, WS; Ma, DM; Cassvan, A; Johnson, EW
This self-directed learning module highlights advances in the clinical evaluation of nerve conduction through peripheral evoked potentials. It is a section of the chapter on electrodiagnosis for the Self-Directed Medical Knowledge Program Study Guide for practitioners and trainees in physical medicine and rehabilitation. This section covers instrumentation, neurophysiology of nerve conduction and neuromuscular transmission, techniques of performing the studies, and clinical applications. Technologic improvements in amplifiers and storage systems have made detailed measurement of sensory and motor responses a routine clinical procedure. The interaction of membrane action potentials and volume conduction is explained, and the effect of abnormal neuromuscular transmission on evoked responses is analyzed. Skin surface techniques for stimulation and recording of potentials are compared with transcutaneous needle techniques. Clinical examples are presented to clarify the usefulness of these studies in evaluating suspected problems, including localized compression neuropathies, peripheral axonopathies, demyelinating neuropathies, and disorders of neuromuscular transmission.
SCOPUS:0023259514
ISSN: 0003-9993
CID: 585362

Physical therapy management of the patient with post-polio syndrome. A case report

Twist, D J; Ma, D M
This case report documents the treatment of a patient who experienced progressive muscle weakness and a decrease in function over time that did not appear to be related to any secondary neuromuscular disease. We discuss the relationship between age and maximal muscle function in addition to some general guidelines for rehabilitation. This type of patient can represent a challenge for the physical therapist. This case report, however, illustrates the degree of muscular and functional recovery that can result with a physical therapy program aimed at reducing levels and intensity of exercise, daily activity, and stress. Such a combination of short-term goals appears to be essential to the successful management of a patient with post-polio syndrome
PMID: 3749273
ISSN: 0031-9023
CID: 138731

Posterior interosseous syndrome revisited

Carfi J; Ma DM
The question of how the supinator syndrome and the posterior interosseous syndrome are (or are not) related has not been well discussed in the literature. The anatomy of the radial nerve and its innervations is quite variable, as are the etiology, presentation, and clinical findings in the lesions of the posterior interosseous nerve. The present study was based on a retrospective review of the electrodiagnostic records of 12 patients with involvement of the deep radial nerve (posterior interosseous nerve) diagnosed at the EMG lab of New York University Medical Center from 1975 to 1983. Two-thirds of these patients had electrophysiologic abnormalities of the supinator muscle, and in the remainder, the supinator was not involved. All superficial radial nerves had normal evoked mode action potential amplitudes and latencies. We propose that the supinator syndrome is a special case of the posterior interosseous syndrome
PMID: 16758573
ISSN: 0148-639x
CID: 64795

Sensory conduction study of distal radial nerve

Ma DM; Kim SH; Spielholz N; Goodgold J
The technique of recording superficial radial sensory nerve action potential (SNAP) from the thumb was compared with that of recording from the 1st web space. The spread of stimulus to the median nerve in the forearm when stimulating the radial sensory nerve with relatively high intensity was also investigated. Recording the radial SNAP from the 1st web space produces a larger amplitude response with a sharper takeoff point compared with that of recording from the thumb. Furthermore, with the former technique, the radial SNAP is uncontaminated by a component arising in the median distribution which makes interpretation of its configuration more reliable
PMID: 7316712
ISSN: 0003-9993
CID: 64279

REPLANTATION OF ABOVE-ELBOW AMPUTEES - TOTAL REHABILITATION PROGRAM [Meeting Abstract]

Chu, DS; Shaw, WW; Ma, DM; Petrillo, CR
ISI:A1980KM73100167
ISSN: 0003-9993
CID: 27960

REPETITIVE STIMULATION OF THE TRAPEZIUS MUSCLE - ITS VALUE IN MYASTHENIC TESTING [Meeting Abstract]

Ma, DM; Wasserman, EJL; Giebfried, J
ISI:A1980KH06800023
ISSN: 0148-639x
CID: 27971

Pressure relief under the ischial tuberosities and sacrum using a cut-out board

Ma, D M; Chu, D S; Davis, S
PMID: 938218
ISSN: 0003-9993
CID: 138732