The Functional Independence Measure for Children (WeeFIM) instrument was developed, based on the FIM instrument, to assess disability in children aged 6 mo to 7 yr. Normative data are reported for American and Japanese children, and it is increasingly used for the disabled. Our purpose was to confirm scale quality and to determine the difficulty pattern of the WeeFIM in Japan. The WeeFIM was measured in 225 children (113 girls and 112 boys) aged 6 mo to 7 yr without developmental delays. The scores were converted to an interval scale by Rasch analysis, which assumes unidimensionality of the measurement items, determines the degree of the fit to the assumption, and decides item difficulty. When the WeeFIM items were divided into two groups of motor and cognitive items to minimize misfit, the degree of misfit was acceptable, except for eating, bladder management, tub/shower transfer, and comprehension. For the motor items, grooming, bathing, and bladder control were more difficult, and stairs, bed/chair transfer, and walk or wheelchair were easier. Concerning the cognitive items, expression and comprehension were easier, and problem-solving was most difficult. When we compared item difficulty patterns in the four age groups (6-21 mo, 22-45 mo, 46-62 mo, and 63-100 mo), we found no differences, except in toilet transfer. It was more difficult for younger children, possibly because of its different pattern of chronological change, which shows rapid changes from dependent to independent levels over a short period of time. Our study confirmed the scale quality of the WeeFIM instrument with Rasch analysis and demonstrated the difficulty pattern of the WeeFIM in nondisabled Japanese children.
The Functional Independence Measure for Children (WeeFIM) was developed based on the FIMSM instrument to assess disability in children aged six months to seven years. Its reliability and validity have been studied, and normative data are available for American children. The WeeFIM instrument is potentially an internationally useful instrument, but data from other countries are lacking. The objectives of this study are to examine whether the WeeFIM instrument is applicable to Japanese children and to describe preliminary normative data. To study interrater reliability, we had two examiners assess 20 nondisabled children and calculated weighted kappas for individual item scores and intraclass correlation coefficients for total scores and motor and cognitive subscores. We then assessed 110 nondisabled children ages six months to seven years to obtain normative data and compared them with the American data. In 51 of these healthy children, we compared total WeeFIM scores with developmental ages as obtained with the Tsumori test, a standardized developmental test widely used in Japan to assess its concurrent validity. The weighted kappas were greater than 0.8, and the intraclass correlation coefficients were greater than 0.98. Total scores and motor and cognitive subscores increased with age, reaching a plateau at 60 to 72 months, which is similar to the American data. There were three patterns of chronologic changes in individual item scores: items showing high correlations with age (Spearman's rho > 0.8; grooming, dressing, memory, etc.), moderate correlations (0.8 > rho > 0.7; eating, bladder, comprehension, etc.), and lower correlations (0.7 > rho > 0.6; locomotion and chair transfer). Total scores correlated significantly with developmental ages (Spearman's rho = 0.938), but there was a discrepancy between each item score and the pass-or-fail patterns of the Tsumori test. This study demonstrated the applicability of the WeeFIM instrument to Japanese children with satisfactory reliability and validity and provided preliminary normative data for future studies.
Study design: Case series. Objectve: The objective was to study the effect of phenol blocks to the motor points of the subscapularis muscle in patients with cervical cord injury (CCI). Setting: Spinal cord injury units of a national hospital in Tokyo. Methods: The participants were seven patients with traumatic CCI, mean age 55.8 years (SD4.0), whose injury level were at the fifth cervical level and the American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) impairment scale was A in 2, C in 1 and D in 4. They were at least 5 months post-acute injury, and complained of pain and limited range of motion (ROM) of their shoulder joint that were unresponsive to usual rehabilitative interventions and medications. Before and after the phenol block to the motor points of the subscapularis muscle, we compared passive and active ROM of the shoulder (flexion, abduction and external rotation), spasticity of the subscapularis as assessed with the modified Ashworth scale, pain as evaluated with a visual analog scale, and eating item of the Functional Independence Measure. Results: There were significant improvements in passive ROM in flexion (23.71), abduction (19.41) and external rotation (16.81; Po0.05). Visual analog scale for shoulder pain was reduced from 6.0 to 3.4 (Po0.05). The modified Ashworth scale for shoulder spasticity, however, did not significantly change. The eating Functional Independence Measure item score improved significantly (Po0.05). Conclusions: This study suggests that subscapularis motor point block for pain and limited ROM with spastic shoulder is a useful technique in patients with CCI.
To clarify electrically-induced muscle fatigue, the relationship between muscle tension and the myoelectrical signals as well as the spatial extent of the glycogendepleted muscle fibers were investigated in the rat hindlimb muscles. Fifty-four male Wistar rats (12 to 16-week-old) were included. Under general anesthesia, tibialis anterior (TA) and soleus (SQL) muscles (20 limbs respectively) were exposed and their distal tendons were attached to the force transducer to measure the isometric tension. A small electrode array consisting of stimulating needles and recording bars was placed over the muscle belly, and tetanic electrical stimulation was applied for 30s at a frequency of either 20Hz or 40Hz. Peak-to-peak amplitude and peak latency of the M-wave, and the muscle fiber conduction velocity (MFCV) were analyzed. The MFCVs were corrected to the temperature of 26C. Histochemical analysis was done for 6 TA muscles after the electrical stimulation. Serial cross-sections of the muscles were stained by the periodic-acid Schiff (PAS) reaction to show the glycogen-depleted muscle fibers near the stimulating electrodes. During tetanic electrical stimulation, progressive amplitude depression and latency increase of the M-waves as well as slowing of the MFCVs were found which were always preceded by decline of the isometric tension. The speed of these changes differed significantly between TA and SQL muscles and between 20 and 40Hz of stimulation frequencies. After the fatiguing 60s-stimulation, the glycogen depletion occurred in a wedge-shaped area with clear margins, which was thought to correspond to the electricallyactivated muscle fibers. Monitoring the M-waves, especially their amplitudes, seems valuable for detecting muscle fatigue before actual tension drops. The results of PAS staining suggest that increasing stimulus intensity to take countermeasures against the tension drop may be of value for automatic control of functional electrical stimulation for the paralyzed muscle in the field of rehabilitation medicine.
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