2005
DOI: 10.1055/b-006-161669
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Das Neue Denkmodell in der Physiotherapie – Band 2: Bewegungsentwicklung und Bewegungskontrolle

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Cited by 5 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…In addition to this, it is possible that delay in gross motor skills and coordination is more difficult to detect in toddlers than in preschool-aged children and school-aged children because of the development of visual-motor coordination and the ability to perform complex motor activity, which increases from 5 years of age. 13 The findings in the 2 cases in the present article support the findings of the abovementioned studies; both patients had congenital torticollis, and they both showed delayed motor skills as infants and then again at school age, but between 2 and 5 years of age, there seemed to be a gap in visible developmental delay. Although we could find only 1 study on congenital torticollis and developmental delay at school age 2 in our literature search, the findings in this case series support a connection.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
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“…In addition to this, it is possible that delay in gross motor skills and coordination is more difficult to detect in toddlers than in preschool-aged children and school-aged children because of the development of visual-motor coordination and the ability to perform complex motor activity, which increases from 5 years of age. 13 The findings in the 2 cases in the present article support the findings of the abovementioned studies; both patients had congenital torticollis, and they both showed delayed motor skills as infants and then again at school age, but between 2 and 5 years of age, there seemed to be a gap in visible developmental delay. Although we could find only 1 study on congenital torticollis and developmental delay at school age 2 in our literature search, the findings in this case series support a connection.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…Furthermore, Hylton 15 noted that the presence of torticollis and tone dysfunction affected the balance of the infant. Ideally, infants should develop the ability to maintain head position in the midline in the supine position within 12 weeks 13 and in the prone position with the neck stretched (tummy time) within about 16 weeks. 13 Most likely, infants with torticollis are not able to do this because of the fixation of the head in lateral flexion and contralateral rotation, which would disturb sensory information about positional symmetry and balance as well as the weight-shifting movements necessary for transitioning from one posture to another.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Since bone and muscle also interact closely chemically and metabolically, fat infiltration is also observed in age-related bone and muscle loss (sarcopenia) 57 . Furthermore, there is an age-related degenerative reduction in mitochondrial function as well as a reduction in the degree of interconnectedness of neurons at the neuronal level, which is also associated with a decrease in responsiveness as well as a reduction in processing speed with regard to motor function among other things [58][59][60][61] . Equivalent age-related changes in lumbar lodosis have not been demonstrated 55,62 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Der Schwerpunkt der Wirkung einer physiotherapeutischen Intervention liegt zwar in einem dieser Orte, dennoch werden auch die anderen drei Wirkbereiche beeinflusst. Auf diesem ‚Neuen Denkmodell‘ beruht der Behandlungsansatz der ‚Integrativen Physiotherapie‘ 18 .…”
Section: Die Geschichte Von Herrn Sunclassified