The aim of this article is to describe our clinical experience in treating muscle imbalance in 49 children with spastic upper extremity involvement. We discuss four cohorts of children treated with botulinum toxin type A (BTX-A), each with different treatment objectives. In the first group, 27 children were treated for functional improvement and, of these, 23 had a positive effect, while four had no objective benefit. In the second group, eight children were treated for purposes of presurgical planning; of these, four were referred for surgery, three continued with serial treatment and one child did not benefit from injection. The third group comprised six children who were treated to improve posture and care: in this group, four children demonstrated clear benefit and two children lost some function subsequent to injection. Finally, a fourth group of seven children were treated after acquired brain injury (three with severe tetraplegia, four with hemiplegia). In this group, all children experienced spasticity relaxation and two children with hemiplegia also gained functional benefit. In terms of adverse events, deterioration of upper extremity function was poorly tolerated but limited to the first 1--3 weeks postinjection. Grip strength or thumb grip were diminished if too high doses were used. Overall, our results with BTX-A were rewarding in children with no fixed contracture, good motor learning capacity and high motivation to train. Additionally, BTX-A treatment has proven valuable for counteracting spasticity in children with acquired brain injury. This treatment modality may not, however, be an appropriate treatment option for all children with severe upper extremity spasticity, due to the shorter duration of effect and the potential reduction in functional abilities seen in this cohort. In all cases, the selection of muscles to be treated needs careful clinical assessment. Dynamic EMG analysis should be performed whenever required to aid muscle selection, especially in children with spasticity combined with dystonia. Evaluation of M-responses suggests that for the forearm muscles, doses of BTX-A above 1.5 U/kg/muscle should not be used.
This paper presents some indications to the existence of a citation advantage related to sharing data using astrophysics as a case. Through bibliometric analyses we find a citation advantage for astrophysical papers in core journals. The advantage arises as indexed papers are associated with data
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68Liber Quarterly Volume 26 Issue 2 2016 by bibliographical links, and consists of papers receiving on average significantly more citations per paper per year, than do papers not associated with links to data.
The usefulness of botulinum toxin A treatment when planning hand surgery in eight children with spastic hemiplegia was evaluated. The hand function of the children was assessed before and after treatment using a test battery consisting of quantitative and qualitative functional assessment. The results of preoperative botulinum treatment supported surgical intervention in four children and serial botulinum treatment in three children. In one child, the preoperative botulinum treatment provided no additional information. We conclude that preoperative botulinum A treatment in most children with spastic hemiplegia, for whom hand surgery is being considered, identifies the patients who would not benefit from the planned surgery or for whom the functional benefit would probably not outweigh the burden of surgical procedure and postoperative rehabilitation.
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