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Stem Cell Ruling Leaves Some Disability

Stem Cell Ruling Leaves Some Disability Research In Limbo

A court action earlier this week halting federal funding for research involving human embryonic stem cells is leaving some research into developmental disabilities up in the air. On Monday,...

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Couple Accused Of Bilking $380,000 In Au

A California couple is accused of defrauding their school district and health insurer, all in what they say was an effort to secure the best services...

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Jobless Rate 60 Percent Higher For Ameri

A first-of-its-kind look at disability employment released Wednesday indicates that just 1 in 5 people with disabilities are employed and they’re disproportionately working part-time. According to the report from...

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Somatosensory-evoked cortical activity in spastic diplegic cerebral palsy PDF Print E-mail
Written by Wingert JR, Sinclair RJ, Dixit S, Damiano DL, Burton H   
Monday, 08 March 2010 06:30
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Somatosensory deficits have been identified in cerebral palsy (CP), but associated cortical brain activity in CP remains
poorly understood. Functional MRI was used to measure blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) responses
during three tactile tasks in 10 participants with spastic diplegia (mean age: 18.70 years, SD: 7.99 years; 5
females) and 10 age-matched controls (mean age: 18.60 years, SD: 3.86 years; 5 females). Tactile stimulation involved
servo-controlled translation of smooth or embossed surfaces across the right index finger pad; the discrimination
tasks with embossed surfaces involved judging whether (1) paired shapes were similar or different, and (2) a
rougher set of horizontal gratings preceded or followed a smoother one. Velocity and duration of surface translation
was identical across all trials. In addition, an event-related design revealed response dynamics per trial in both
groups. Compared to controls, individuals with spastic diplegia had significantly reduced spatial extents in activated
cortical areas and smaller BOLD response magnitudes in cortical areas for somatosensation, motor, and goaldirected/
attention behaviors. These results provide mechanisms for the widespread somatosensory deficits in CP.
The reduced activation noted across multiple cortical areas might contribute to motor deficits in CP

 

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