1.Effectiveness of transsylvian selective amygdalohippocampectomy for preserving memory function in patients with hippocampal sclerosis
Michiharu Morino ; Takehiro Uda ; Taiki Nagai ; Noriaki Minami ; Hirotaka Ito ; Atsushi Hosono
Neurology Asia 2013;18(s1):51-55
It remains unclear whether selective amygdalohippocampectomy, an operative technique developed
for use in epilepsy surgery to spare unaffected brain tissue and thus minimize the cognitive
consequences of temporal lobe surgery, actually leads to a better memory outcome. The present
study was performed to investigate the effects of selective surgery on memory outcome in patients
with intractable mesial temporal lobe epilepsy due to hippocampal sclerosis treated by transsylvian
selective amygdalohippocampectomy (TSA). The results of the present study indicated that left
TSA for hippocampal sclerosis tends to improve verbal memory function with preservation of other
memory function. Right TSA for hippocampal sclerosis can lead to signifi cant improvement in verbal
and nonverbal memory function, with the memory improvement observed one month after right TSA
persisting until one year after surgery.
2.Effects of educational intervention on joint angles of the trunk and lower extremity and on muscle activities during patient-handling tasks.
Toru AKEBI ; Masaiwa INOUE ; Noriaki HARADA
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2009;14(2):118-127
OBJECTIVEThe objective of this study was to examine the effects of educational intervention on joint angles of the trunk and lower extremity and on muscle activities during patient-handling task.
METHODSThirty-two subjects (17 males and 15 females) volunteered for the study. They were classified into three groups: intervention group 1, comprised of first grade physical therapist students; control group, which included first grade occupational therapist students; intervention group 2, which comprised third grade physical therapist students. The educational intervention during the experimental period consisted of: (1) 12 regular classes and short-term clinical practice for the students of intervention group 1; (2) long-term clinical practice, relating to patient-handling task, for the students of intervention group 2. The following experiments were repeated before and after the educational intervention. Each subject was asked to transfer a male (55 kg) from one chair to a second chair (left to right) and then back again to the original chair (right to left). The flexion angles of the trunk, hip and knee joints were quantified by means of the dynamic three-dimensional biomechanical analysis. Muscle activities (% maximum voluntary contraction, %MVC) of biceps brachii, trapezius, rectus femoris and erector spinae muscles were measured using surface electromyography (EMG). The effects of group, gender, measurement time and side on joint angles of trunk and lower extremity, %MVC of four muscle activities and transfer time were assessed.
RESULTSAlthough the EMG analysis could not clearly demonstrate any reduction of physical load to the low back, the flexion angles of the hip and knee joints of student subjects during the patient-handling task became larger and that of the trunk became smaller in the group given the educational intervention.
CONCLUSIONThe finding of this study suggests that the posture of the study subjects changed to the squat lifting method, which is preferable for reducing the physical load to the lower back, as a result of the educational intervention.