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Introduction Spasticity is a frequent clinical sign in people with neurological diseases that affects mobility and causes serious complications pain, joint limitation, muscular contractions and bed sores, which have a significant effect on the individual's functionality and quality of life. Aim To review the integration, description and critical interpretation of the most recent scientific evidence on the clinical variability of spasticity and associated symptoms, the different pathophysiological mechanisms and their relevance in the diagnostic and therapeutic approach. Development A search was conducted in the scientific publications on the different aspects of spasticity grouped into two main categories cerebral and spinal cord pathologies. The epidemiological, clinical and pathophysiological aspects, clinical and instrumental diagnoses, and the physiotherapeutic, pharmacological and surgical approach to spasticity in each group of pathologies were all reviewed. Conclusion Spasticity is related to structural lesions and maladaptive neuroplastic changes that determine an important variability in its clinical expression. Although its diagnosis presents important limitations, the use of clinical and neurophysiological diagnostic tools aimed at achieving different approaches in cases of neurological pathologies originating in the brain and in the spinal cord could optimise the effectiveness of spasticity therapies.Introduction The prevalence of oropharyngeal dysphagia is high after a stroke. Clinically, it manifests as alterations affecting swallowing efficiency and safety, with the consequent morbidity and mortality associated with nutritional and respiratory alterations. Aim To carry out an updated review of the diagnostic and therapeutic aspects of oropharyngeal dysphagia after a stroke that can be applied in daily clinical practice, and of the non-invasive neurostimulation techniques. Development The process of diagnosis and treatment of oropharyngeal dysphagia aims to screen, identify and diagnose patients at risk of dysphagia, and establish the dietary and therapeutic measures that ensure proper nutrition and hydration of patients under safe conditions. The diagnosis is based on the clinical examination of swallowing and on instrumental examinations such as videofluoroscopy and fibro-endoscopy. Therapeutic measures include compensatory and rehabilitative strategies (active manoeuvres, motor control exercises, neuromuscular electrostimulation and botulinum toxin treatment). Neurostimulation techniques include non-invasive central stimulation and intrapharyngeal electrical stimulation. Conclusion The prevalence of oropharyngeal dysphagia is high after a stroke. Diagnosis should include a clinical evaluation and an instrumental examination, and thus objectively indicate the treatment, which will include compensatory and restorative measures with which to reduce the associated morbidity and mortality.Introduction In the vast majority of cases stroke entails long-term limitations in the use of the upper extremities that are affected. Robotic technologies provide beneficial results in motor rehabilitation, but the optimal levels of intensity are not known. Aims To review the scientific literature (over the last 10 years) on robotic therapies (intervention group) compared to conventional therapies (control group) in the chronic phase of stroke, and to study correlations between variables that characterise the interventions and intensity variables. Subjects and methods A systematic review was conducted of randomised controlled clinical trials in PubMed, Web of Science, Cochrane Library and Google Scholar, with results assessed by the Fugl-Meyer Assessment-Upper Extremity Motor Score (mFMA-UE). The methodological quality was analysed using the Physiotherapy Evidence Database scale (PEDro). Results Thirteen studies from evidence level I (92%, excellent) were selected. Positive correlations between minutes per week and improvements in mFMA-UE are observed in the control group and in the intervention group, with a higher level of significance for the latter. Negative correlations are observed between the number of months since the lesion and improvements in the control and intervention groups. An exponential regression is included, which illustrates differences between the control group and the intervention group in favour of the latter. A negative correlation is observed between the total duration and the number of minutes per week. Conclusion Significant correlations are observed between intensity (minutes per week) and mFMA-UE, with a higher level of significance in the intervention group.Listeners exposed to accented speech must adjust how they map between acoustic features and lexical representations such as phonetic categories. A robust form of this adaptive perceptual learning is learning to perceive synthetic speech where the connections between acoustic features and phonetic categories must be updated. Both implicit learning through mere exposure and explicit learning through directed feedback have previously been shown to produce this type of adaptive learning. The present study crosses implicit exposure and explicit feedback with the presence or absence of a written identification task. We show that simple exposure produces some learning, but explicit feedback produces substantially stronger learning, whereas requiring written identification did not measurably affect learning. These results suggest that explicit feedback guides learning of new mappings between acoustic patterns and known phonetic categories. We discuss mechanisms that may support learning via implicit exposure.The type of clothing worn, revealing versus concealing, can affect the performance of women on cognitive tasks. This difference in performance may arise because of changes in body awareness that may draw cognitive resources from the goal task. The present study investigated the influence of the style of athletic clothing and body awareness on visual-motor performance in women. Participants (women ages 18-35 years) were randomly assigned to wear tight and revealing (TR group, n = 40) or loose and concealing (LC group, n = 40) athletic clothing. All participants completed the same visual-motor aiming task to assess spatiotemporal measures of motor performance. In addition to the clothing, participants were primed to be conscious of their bodies via measurements of height, weight, and waist circumference; photographs taken of their bodies; a computerized body-size distortion task; and a mirror in the testing chamber. Results revealed that the TR group had increased movement time variability and did not show performance improvements relative to the LC group. These differences suggest that style of clothing may influence motor performance in women by reallocating cognitive resources towards the body and away from the motor task at hand. This research highlights the interactions between cognitive and motor processes and, potentially, the importance of considering the impact of clothing on performance in many different contexts.The ongoing spread of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) poses a significant threat to global health. As the coronavirus outbreak began spreading, hospitals were forced to relocate resources to treat the growing number of COVID-19 patients. As a consequence, doctors across the country canceled tens of thousands of nonurgent surgeries. However, recognizing that the COVID-19 situation may be highly variable and fluid in different communities across the country, elective surgery could be still allowed in some centers for patients included in the high-priority class. The majority of endocrine disorders requiring surgical treatment in patients identifiable as first-priority class, or needing hospitalization within 30 days, are generally represented by malignant thyroid tumors, hyperthyroidism, hyperparathyroidism, and some adrenal disorders. The need for urgent intervention is evaluated on a case-by-case basis according to the severity of the symptoms, the likelihood of progression, and global clinical judgment. On the basis of the above indications, during the last 4 weeks, we performed 18 planned surgical treatments in patients with thyroid cancer (total thyroidectomies, plus lymph node dissection if needed) or multinodular toxic goiter. In no case, postoperative ventilatory support was needed, and the average hospital stay was 3 days. The negative COVID-19 status for all the treated patients was appropriately evaluated beforehand. Nobody knows how long the current COVID-19 pandemic will be lasting. Certainly, we will be requested in the next future to incrementally offer surgical services for endocrine disorders that have been deferred for the COVID-19 pandemic.Purpose To examine the effect of predictive factors on institutionalization among older patients. Methods The participants were older (aged 75 years or older) home-dwelling citizens evaluated at Urgent Geriatric Outpatient Clinic (UrGeriC) for the first time between the 1st of September 2013 and the 1st of September 2014 (n = 1300). They were followed up for institutionalization for 3 years. Death was used as a competing risk in Cox regression analyses. Results The mean age of the participants was 85.1 years (standard deviation [SD] 5.5, range 75-103 years), and 74% were female. The rates of institutionalization and mortality were 29.9% and 46.1%, respectively. The mean age for institutionalization was 86.1 (SD 5.6) years. According to multivariate Cox regression analyses, the use of home care (hazard ratio 2.43, 95% confidence interval 1.80-3.27, p less then 0.001), dementia (2.38, 1.90-2.99, p less then 0.001), higher age (≥ 95 vs. 75-84; 1.65, 1.03-2.62, p = 0.036), and falls during the previous 12 months (≥ 2 vs. no falls; 1.54, 1.10-2.16, p = 0.012) significantly predicted institutionalization during the 3-year follow-up. Conclusion Cognitive and/or functional impairment mainly predicted institutionalization among older patients of UrGeriC having health problems and acute difficulties in managing at home.Purpose When screening large populations, performance-based measures can be difficult to conduct because they are time consuming and costly, and require well-trained assessors. The aim of the present study is to validate a set of questions replacing the performance-based measures slowness and weakness as part of the Fried frailty phenotype (FRIED-P). Methods A cross-sectional study was conducted among community-dwelling older adults (≥ 60 years) in three Flemish municipalities. The Fried Phenotype (FRIED-P) was used to measure physical frailty. The two performance-based measures of the Fried Phenotype (slowness and weakness) were also measured by means of six substituting questions (FRIED-Q). These questions were validated through sensitivity, specificity, Cohen's kappa value, observed agreement, correlation analysis, and the area under the curve (AUC, ROC curve). Results 196 older adults participated. According to the FRIED-P, 19.5% of them were frail, 56.9% were pre-frail and 23.6% were non-frail. For slowness, the observed sensitivity was 47.0%, the specificity was 96.5% and the AUC was 0.717. For weakness, the sensitivity was 46.2%, the specificity was 83.7%, and the AUC was 0.649. The overall Spearman correlation between the FRIED-P and the FRIED-Q was r = 0.721 with an observed agreement of 76.6% (weighted linear kappa value = 0.663, quadratic kappa value = 0.738). Conclusions The concordance between the FRIED-P and FRIED-Q was substantial, characterized by a very high specificity, but a moderate sensitivity. This alternative operationalization of the Fried Phenotype-i.e., including six replacement questions instead of two performance-based tests-can be considered to apply as screening tool to screen physical frailty in large populations.

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