Lecture 15 - Cerebral Palsy Flashcards

1
Q

Define Cerebral Palsy

A

umbrella term for a group of UMN disorders
disorder of movement and or posture and of motor function

any event that happens before birth and up to 28 days post birth

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2
Q

UMN syndrome/CP results in

A

spasticity - velocity dependent muscle tone
dyskinesia - abnormal muscle tone/posture

Long term sequeale: weakness, fatigue, contracture

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3
Q

What are some associated impairments of an CP

A
visual - 35%
hearing - 10%
speech - 61%
swallowing 
intellectual 
epilepsy - 28%
scoliosis
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4
Q

What is the incidence rate of CP

A

2-2.5/1000

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5
Q

What are some risk factors for CP

A
male
premature
low birth weight
traumatic birth 
aboriginal 
multiple birth
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6
Q

Age of diagnosis - what percentage of children are diagnosed with CP when 0-6 m old, and 7-12 m old

A

0-6 = 26%

7-12 =27%

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7
Q

What are the 3 ways to describe CP

A

predominant movement disorder
topographical movement disorder
functional classifications

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8
Q

what are the 4 types of topographic CP and there most affected areas

A

Diplegia - 36% - legs bilaterally
Hemiplegia - 39% - unilateral arm and leg
Quadriplegia - 22% - arms and legs bilaterally

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9
Q

Explain the 5 levels of gross motor functional classification

A

Level 1 - walks independently on all surfaces
Level 2 - has difficulty with uneven surfaces, climbs stairs holding onto rails
Level 3 - assistive mobility device
Level 4 - power mobility
Level 5 - no independence, transported by carer in wheelchair

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10
Q

Explain the functional mobility scale

A

looks at mobility over 3 distances: 5m, 50m, 500m

6 - no walking aids, all surfaces
5 - no walking aids, requires rail for stairs
4 - uses sticks, without help from another person
3 - crutches without help
2 - walker
1 - wheelchair

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11
Q

Treatments for CP medical and therapy

A
  • Reduce Spasticity - baclofen, botox, SDR
  • Improve ROM and prevent contracture - casting, surgery
  • Improve Strength - hydrotherapy, E-stim, resistance
  • Improve Bone density - standing, vit d
  • Improve function - goal directed, home therapy, content focused
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12
Q

What are 3 ways to reduce spasticity

A

Botox: binds to cholinergic nerve endings and blocks acetyl choline - modulates spasticity, peak impact 3-4 weeks post injection

Baclofen: dampens down spinal reflexes, for level 4 and 5 use only

Selective Dorsal Rhizotomy - modifies reflexes and descending inputs from dorsal nerve root - gets permanent reduction in spasticity. surgeon exposes nerve fibers and tests them, cuts the ones that cause spasticity

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13
Q

What is some essential criteria for SDR

A
  • at least 2 years of age
  • spastic diplegia
  • must have some form of mobility with or without assistive devices
  • patients must exhibit potential for improvement with or without assistive devices
  • exclusions - no damage to basal ganglia on MRI
  • support - motivated family
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14
Q

Ways to improve ROM and reduce contracture

A

casting
surgery
education for family

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