(Press-News.org) In the 'Journal of Neuroscience' (DOI:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5912-11.2012) the researchers present the results of their study, showing how a local anesthetic can distinctly improve the motor skills of patients after a stroke.
"Many stroke patients suffer from chronic impairment of the hand or of the complete arm," Professor Dr. Thomas Weiss explains. Together with expert colleagues the psychologist of the department of Biological and Clinical Psychology at Jena University has been working for a number of years on a specialized medical training therapy which clearly enhances the mobility of stroke patients. In the 'Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy' (CIMT) the healthy arm is being restrained in a cuff, while the stroke-affected arm and hand are intensely training fine motor skills. Patients are asked to carry out tasks such as stacking small toy blocks or putting tiny pins into a perforated board. Daily activities like washing one's hand are part of the training. "Nearly every affected person benefits from this training," Weiss's colleague Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Miltner says. The chair of Biological and Clinical Psychology developed the therapy together with American colleagues and refers to the comprehensive study results about the efficiency of the program. "We are happy to carry out this therapy on many patients - together with our colleagues from the psychology department in the neurological day hospital," the director of the clinic for Neurology, Prof. Dr. Otto Witte, stresses.
In addition, the impact of the exercise therapy could be clearly enhanced when the sensitivity of the affected arm was lowered by an anesthetic, as the interdisciplinary Jena team was able to demonstrate. In their study, the scientists examined 36 patients. Half of the patients had a local anesthetic cream applied on their forearms. Meanwhile the other patient group only received a placebo. Afterwards, both patient groups went into their exercise therapy for a day.
"Unsurprisingly, the motor performance of all patients was strongly enhanced," Prof. Weiss commented on the result. "Beyond that, it became obvious that the patients who received the anesthetic benefited even more than the placebo group," Weiss says. The researchers could show the reason for this effect using magnetoencephalographic imaging (MEG) of the patients. The temporary interruption of nerve impulses from the forearm leads to a decreasing activity in the brain areas processing these impulses. "At the same time neighboring brain cells are activated more strongly," the Jena Psychologist explains. Thus the brain reacts to the missing impulses from the forearm with an increased sensitivity in the hand as the MEG images showed. Consequently the motor performance improves as well. "This process starts within minutes," Thomas Weiss says.
A subsequent study is going to show whether the combination of local anesthetics and therapeutic exercise will improve the mobility of stroke patients in the long term.
INFORMATION:
Original Publication:
Sens E. et al.: Effects of Temporary Functional Deafferentation on the Brain, Sensation, and Behavior of Stroke Patients, Journal of Neuroscience Vol. 32 (34): 11773-11779, DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5912-11.2012
Further information about 'Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy' (CIMT) can be found at: www.taubsches-training.uni-jena.de
Contact:
Prof. Dr. Thomas Weiss
Institute of Psychology
Friedrich Schiller University Jena
Am Steiger 3 / Haus 1, D-07743 Jena
Germany
Phone: ++49 3641 / 945143
Email: weiss@biopsy.uni-jena.de
More mobility – Due to deafferentation
Therapy for stroke patients improved by scientists of Jena University and the University Hospital Jena
2012-11-05
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Researchers make strides toward selective oxidation catalysts
2012-11-05
Oxide catalysts, typically formulated as powders, play an integral role in many chemical transformations, including cleaning wastewater, curbing tailpipe emissions, and synthesizing most consumer products.
Greener, more efficient chemical processes would benefit greatly from solid oxide catalysts that are choosier about their reactants, but achieving this has proven a challenge. Now researchers from Northwestern University and Argonne National Laboratory have developed a straightforward and generalizable process for making reactant-selective oxide catalysts by encapsulating ...
Scientists find Achilles’ heel of cancer cells
2012-11-05
Several substances inhibiting so-called HDAC enzymes have been studied in trials searching for new anti-cancer drugs in recent years. "Trials have shown that HDAC inhibitors are very effective in arresting growth of cultured cancer cells. But apart from a very rare type of lymphoma, these drugs unfortunately do not clinically affect malignant tumors," says Prof. Dr. Olaf Witt, who heads a research department at DKFZ and is pediatrician at the Center for Child and Adolescent Medicine of Heidelberg University Hospital.
In the cell, histone deacetylases (HDAC) are responsible ...
Many patients who die while awaiting liver transplant have had donor organs declined
2012-11-05
The majority of patients on the liver transplant waitlist who died received offers of high-quality donated livers that were declined prior to their death, according to a new study in Gastroenterology, the official journal of the American Gastroenterological Association. Therefore, efforts other than simply increasing the availability of donated livers or the number of offers are needed to substantially reduce the deaths among those waiting for a transplant.
"Our findings suggest that waitlist deaths are not simply due to lack of donor organs, as many of us assume. Rather, ...
Women's body talk: Perception stronger than reality?
2012-11-05
How women think their friends feel about their bodies influences their own body concerns, according to a new study by Dr. Louise Wasylkiw and Molly Williamson from Mount Alison University in Canada. Their work, which examines the role of friends in young women's body concerns, is published online in Springer's journal Sex Roles.
Research shows that friends influence how girls and women view and judge their own body weight, shape and size. What Wasylkiw and Williamson's work sheds light on, is how much of a young woman's body concerns are shaped by her perceptions of ...
Build your own home theater for full-blast entertainment with 'Virtual Sound Ball'
2012-11-05
Daejeon, Republic of Korea, November 5th, 2012—Watching a 3 dimensional (3D) film at home can be just as real and fun as going to a movie theater. Professor Yang-Hann Kim and Research Professor Jung-Woo Choi from the Department of Mechanical Engineering, KAIST, have succeeded in building an audio rendering system that will considerably improve the current 3D audio effects technology.
3D audio effects can be produced by stereo speakers, surround-sound speakers, speaker-arrays, or headphones, which essentially give an illusion to listeners that sounds are being produced ...
Sensors for the real world
2012-11-05
Over the last decade there has been an increased interest in developing resonators for gravitmetric sensing; however, the sensors' response to variations in temperature has prevented them from being used outside the laboratory. New sensors developed by researchers at the University of Cambridge negate the effects of temperature so that they may be used in industries including health care, telecommunications and environmental monitoring.
Sensors built from high frequency bulk acoustic wave (BAW) resonators consist of a piezoelectric layer sandwiched between two electrodes, ...
Electron microscopes with a twist
2012-11-05
This press release is available in German.
Nowadays, electron microscopes are an essential tool, especially in the field of materials science. At TU Vienna, electron beams are being created that possess an inner rotation, similarly to a tornado. These "vortex beams" cannot only be used to display objects, but to investigate material-specific properties - with precision on a nanometer scale. A new breakthrough in research now allows scientists to produce much more intense vortex beams than ever before.
Quantum Tornado: the Electron as a Wave
In a tornado, the individual ...
High-strength material advancements at Wayne State University may lead to new, life-saving steel
2012-11-05
DETROIT— There has been great advancements in the development of the high-strength steel and the need for additional enhancements continue to grow. Various industries have a need for structural components that are lighter and stronger, improve energy efficiencies, reduce emissions and pollution increase safety and cost less to produce, particularly in the automotive industry.
A group of researchers in Wayne State University's College of Engineering have been working to create advanced materials with high-yield strength, fracture toughness and ductility. Their efforts ...
Duke Medicine news -- Some heart patients may respond differently to anti-platelet drugs
2012-11-05
DURHAM, N.C. – The cause of heart attacks or strokes among some patients treated with anti-platelet drugs may be different than for patients who have undergone surgical procedures to restore blood flow, according to researchers at Duke Medicine.
The finding -- reported Nov. 4, 2012, at the American Heart Association's Scientific Sessions annual meeting and published in the Journal of the American Medical Association – provides new insights into a subset of heart patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS) whose risk for cardiovascular events remained unchanged despite ...
Cockatoo 'can make its own tools'
2012-11-05
A cockatoo from a species not known to use tools in the wild has been observed spontaneously making and using tools for reaching food and other objects.
A Goffin's cockatoo called 'Figaro', that has been reared in captivity and lives near Vienna, used his powerful beak to cut long splinters out of wooden beams in its aviary, or twigs out of a branch, to reach and rake in objects out of its reach. Researchers from the Universities of Oxford and Vienna filmed Figaro making and using these tools.
How the bird discovered how to make and use tools is unclear but shows how ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
CNT wires for wearable electronic devices from the existing fiber manufacturing process!
Researchers reveal role of zeolite zcid site accessibility in syngas conversion
Gender gap in teenage depression is twice as large in London than in Tokyo, new study finds
Coffee-making robot breaks new ground for AI machines
Protecting crops: Researchers open up new avenue to combat a widespread plant virus
UCLA discovers first stroke rehabilitation drug to repair brain damage
Only around 1 in 10 common non-surgical and non-invasive treatments for back pain effective
Installing safety nets on Golden Gate Bridge linked to 73% decline in suicides
Increasing fruit, fiber, dairy and caffeine linked to lower risk of tinnitus
Does BMI become useless as we age?
Rice statistician earns $1 million CPRIT award to advance AI-powered precision medicine for prostate cancer
Whose air quality are we monitoring?
Team Hope rides (again) for cancer research at the Tour de Scottsdale
Researchers find missing link in autoimmune disorder
‘Democratizing chemical analysis’: FSU chemists use machine learning and robotics to identify chemical compositions from images
Leveraging data science for disease prediction in the fight against rheumatoid arthritis
Kennedy Krieger screening model improves early autism diagnosis for underserved communities
Blood pressure patterns during pregnancy predict later hypertension risk, study finds
Latest Alzheimer’s drug shown less effective in females than males
Moffitt study finds vaccine may improve breast cancer treatment outcomes
Adoption of international auditing standards leads to better financial reporting
Internal displacement in Syria used to reshape the country’s political and social landscape, new study shows
Building a safer future: Rice researcher works to strengthen Haiti’s earthquake resilience
Diverging views of democracy fuel support for authoritarian politicians, Notre Dame study shows
Bacteria invade brain after implanting medical devices
New platform lets anyone rapidly prototype large, sturdy interactive structures
Non-genetic theories of cancer address inconsistencies in current paradigm
Food and non-alcoholic drink products in Mexico were substantially reformulated to be healthier following the 2020 introduction of warning labels identifying products with excessive content of calorie
Conservation efforts are bringing species back from the brink, even as overall biodiversity falls
Conservation efforts analysis reveals which actions are most helpful for endangered species status
[Press-News.org] More mobility – Due to deafferentationTherapy for stroke patients improved by scientists of Jena University and the University Hospital Jena