Noonan-Eaton Kathryn, Stout Danielle, Goode-Roberts MacKenzie, Leon Machado Laura, Davis Matthew, Behrman Andrea L
SCI Out-Patient Program, Frazier Rehab Institute, Louisville, KY, United States.
Department of Neurological Surgery and Kentucky Spinal Cord Injury Research Center, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY, United States.
Front Rehabil Sci. 2023 May 19;4:1063724. doi: 10.3389/fresc.2023.1063724. eCollection 2023.
Acute flaccid myelitis (AFM) occurs rarely in children and adolescents when damage to spinal motor neurons rapidly causes flaccid paralysis of limb, trunk, and neck muscles and potentially respiratory failure. When neck muscles are weakened or paralyzed, a child loses head control, severely compromising engagement with their environment. Compensation for lack of head control is achieved with external support devices attached to a wheelchair, but there is no indication in the AFM literature of therapeutic efforts to restore head control. In this case series, we explore the possibility of the recovery of head control when children with AFM received activity-based restorative therapies (ABRTs) guided by principles targeting motor control.
Three children, two male and one female, aged 6, 9, and 7, with a history of AFM-onset at 5, 7, and 4 years respectively, enrolled in an activity-based restorative therapies outpatient program targeting activation of the neuromuscular system below the lesion. Each of them lacked head control, was either ventilator-dependent or had a tracheostomy, and was a power wheelchair user via hand/foot control.
Activity-based restorative therapies were provided 5 days/week: 1.5 h of activity-based locomotor training and 1.5 h of activity-based neuromuscular electrical stimulation.
An approach to addressing head/neck control developed iteratively across disciplines, from complete compensation with passive external head support to emerging head control during diverse tasks, e.g., sitting, reaching, driving a power chair, sit-to-stand, standing, stepping on a treadmill, and walking. Key principles identified and employed were (a) passive facilitation, (b) external head support, (c) posterior head support, (d) graded manual facilitation, and (e) independent head control.
The recovery of head control in children with paralysis due to AFM may be accelerated when executing a step-wise progression to effectively target and challenge head control in parallel with activity-based restorative therapies. In treating three children with a chronic lack of head control, a therapeutic strategy was iteratively developed guided by scientific principles, e.g., segmental assessment of control, to promote recovery of head control. While this strategy is encouraging, gaps in sensitive and responsive measurement instruments and treatment technologies persist in guiding assistance, challenging, and promoting independent head control.
急性弛缓性脊髓炎(AFM)在儿童和青少年中很少见,脊髓运动神经元受损会迅速导致肢体、躯干和颈部肌肉弛缓性麻痹,并可能导致呼吸衰竭。当颈部肌肉无力或麻痹时,儿童会失去头部控制能力,严重影响其与周围环境的互动。通过安装在轮椅上的外部支撑装置可以弥补头部控制能力的不足,但AFM文献中没有关于恢复头部控制能力的治疗方法的报道。在本病例系列中,我们探讨了AFM患儿接受以运动控制为导向的基于活动的恢复性治疗(ABRTs)时恢复头部控制能力的可能性。
三名儿童,两男一女,年龄分别为6岁、9岁和7岁,分别在5岁、7岁和4岁时发病,均有AFM病史,参加了一个基于活动的恢复性治疗门诊项目,目标是激活病变以下的神经肌肉系统。他们每个人都缺乏头部控制能力,要么依赖呼吸机,要么做了气管切开术,都是通过手/脚控制使用电动轮椅。
每周5天提供基于活动的恢复性治疗:1.5小时的基于活动的运动训练和1.5小时的基于活动的神经肌肉电刺激。
一种解决头部/颈部控制问题的方法在跨学科中反复发展,从完全依靠被动外部头部支撑到在各种任务(如坐、伸手、驾驶电动轮椅、从坐到站、站立、在跑步机上行走和步行)中逐渐恢复头部控制能力。确定并采用的关键原则包括:(a)被动促进;(b)外部头部支撑;(c)头部后部支撑;(d)分级手动促进;(e)独立头部控制。
对于因AFM导致瘫痪的儿童,在执行逐步进展以有效地靶向并挑战头部控制能力的同时,并行进行基于活动的恢复性治疗,可能会加速头部控制能力的恢复。在治疗三名长期缺乏头部控制能力的儿童时,以科学原则(如控制的分段评估)为指导,反复制定了一种治疗策略,以促进头部控制能力的恢复。虽然这一策略令人鼓舞,但在指导辅助、挑战和促进独立头部控制能力方面,灵敏且反应性强的测量工具和治疗技术仍存在差距。