Posts Tagged Educational

[Poster] Cognitive Rehabilitation Information for the Families of Individuals with Traumatic Brain Injury: A Review of Online Resources

To identify and critically appraise the content, readability, accessibility and usability of websites providing information on cognitive rehabilitation for the families of adults with traumatic brain injury (TBI).

Source: Cognitive Rehabilitation Information for the Families of Individuals with Traumatic Brain Injury: A Review of Online Resources – Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

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[WEB SITE] Research could pave way for more effective and safer anti-epilepsy drugs

Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC) researchers have discovered how a new epilepsy drug works, which may lead the way to even more effective and safer medications.

The findings were published today in Neuron.

The most commonly used anti-epilepsy drugs are ineffective for about 30 percent of people with seizure disorders.

A new direction in the treatment of epilepsy is aimed at inhibiting AMPA receptors, which help transmit electrical signals in the brain and play a key role in propagating seizures. Currently, perampanel is the only FDA-approved drug that targets AMPA receptors. But because perampanel is associated with significant side effects, its clinical use has been limited.

“The problem is that AMPA receptors are heavily involved in the central nervous system, so if you inhibit their function, you cause an array of unwanted effects,” said study leader Alexander I. Sobolevsky, PhD, professor of biochemistry and molecular biophysics at CUMC. “If we hope to design better drugs for epilepsy, we need to learn more about the structure and function of these receptors.”

In this study, Dr. Sobolevsky employed a technique called crystallography to determine how perampanel and two other inhibitors interact with the AMPA receptors to stop transmission of electrical signals. The study was conducted using rat AMPA receptors, which are almost identical to human receptors.

In the new study, the researchers were able to pinpoint exactly where the drugs bind to AMPA receptors.

“Our data suggest that the inhibitors wedge themselves into the AMPA receptor, which prevents the opening of a channel within the receptor,” said Dr. Sobolevsky. When that channel is closed, ions cannot pass into the cell to trigger an electrical signal.

According to the researchers, these findings may allow drug makers to develop medications that are highly selective for the AMPA receptors, which could be safer and more effective than currently available anti-epilepsy drugs.

Source: Research could pave way for more effective and safer anti-epilepsy drugs

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[WEB SITE] 3 ways Virtual Reality can change healthcare

Healthcare has a long history of benefiting from new technologies, and it started using virtual reality surprisingly early. Education, rehabilitation and early detection are the three main areas where VR can contribute the most.

Education and visualisation

VR can help education in two distinct ways. First, it can help medical students and medical professionals to practice complex medical treatments, such as surgeries. Some universities, including Stanford, have been using virtual reality for years now in medical training. As a student you can see exactly the same as your professor conducting an operation. Practicing in virtual scenarios is cost effective, and very accessible.

VR can also help people who are not medical professionals, but who are living with a medical condition, or just want to learn more about a specific medical symptom. Since virtual reality can simulate any medical condition it can teach parents how to raise a child with disabilities. It helps to understand blindness, colour blindness, autism, mental issues, or as seen in the video, just a “simple” migraine.

Rehabilitation and assessment

A small circle of healthcare professionals has been experimenting with virtual reality in brain damage recovery and assessment for quite some time now. The scientific paper CyberPsychology & Behavior published a whole study on using VR in brain damage rehabilitation as early as 2005. These techniques are now getting adopted on a much wider scale.

The military, also well-known for utilising the latest technologies, is now using VR for post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) rehabilitation, helping soldiers who returned from war zones. It’s also being used in psychiatry in exposure therapies, helping patients to overcame their fears. DEEP is using VR as a meditation tool.

The possibilities of using virtual reality in rehabilitation and neurological assessment are endless.

Early detection and the power of virtual reality in changing habits

Virtual reality can be combined with gaming and data visualisation. Vivid Vision is using VR to detect and analyse eye problems like amblyopia and strabismus, through VR vision analysis and simple games. Unello Designs is developing VR tools for stress relief, meditation, relaxation and to help patients overcoming phobias. VR is also used to cure fears like agoraphobia, anxiety or even to help quitting bad habits.  And we haven’t even started talking about wellness and fitness (check VirZOOM for example), a huge market on its own.

Healthcare is an incredibly exciting field, as both virtual reality and biotechnology are developing in a breathtaking pace. The synergies will profoundly change the whole industry in the upcoming decades.

Continue —> 3 ways Virtual Reality can change healthcare — RealityShift

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[WEB SITE] What is an Occupational Therapist?

Occupational therapy is an allied health profession that plays a key role in the rehabilitation process of many conditions, injuries or illnesses. Occupational therapists possess knowledge about how individuals, the environment and human occupation (activity) stimulate health and well-being.

The Occupational Therapists professional philosophy is to maximise occupational (often referred to as functional) independence.  They use activities that are meaningful to the client to develop treatment plans, taking an holistic and client centred approach.

For occupational therapists, occupation refers to the activities of everyday living that people need to, want to and are expected to do. Therefore an occupational therapist can help a person regain and/or maintain personal purpose and independence in everyday living.

Consider the activities you participate in every day. Getting washed and dressed, cooking, making a drink, getting to work and socialising; or the roles you have, father/mother, son/daughter, colleague, friend and carer.  How would you complete these tasks or perform the expected roles if you were affected by trauma, chronically deteriorating health or relapse of some kind?

The Occupational Therapist provides practical support to enable people to facilitate recovery and overcome any barriers that prevent them from doing the activities that matter to them, covering all developmental & life stages.

Continue —> What is an Occupational Therapist?

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[REVIEW] Community Reintegration | EBRSR – Evidence-Based Review of Stroke Rehabilitation – Full Text PDF

 

Abstract

While the majority of stroke survivors return to live in the community, re-integration may be an enormous challenge. The ability to return to an acceptable lifestyle, participating in both social and domestic activities is important for perceived quality of life. The present review examines issues arising following discharge from hospital care or rehabilitation into the community. These include social support, impact of caregiving on informal carers, family functioning, provision of information and education, leisure activities, driving, sexuality and return to work.

Get Full Text PDF

via Community Reintegration | EBRSR – Evidence-Based Review of Stroke Rehabilitation.

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