Cralle Physical Therapy

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Brain Rehabiliation: The Gorilla in the Room

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Brain Rehabilitation: The Gorilla in the Room

Neurobiologist have found that Glial cells, that were often ignored as the glue that held neurons together, are the Gorilla in the room. Rapidly growing evidence is revealing that 85 to 90 percent of our brains, made up of Glial cells, have surprising influence on neurons. Much like RNA was once considered “junk DNA” and is now known to be what really makes us humans different from gorillas- in spite our very few DNA differences.

R. Douglas Fields, PhD is chief of the Section on Nervous System Development and Plasticity at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, a part of the National Institutes of Health, and Adjunct Professor in the Neuro Science and Cognitive Science Program at the University of Maryland, College Park has published a book “The Other Brain”. This is a must read for anyone interested in Neuro Rehabilitation of Brain injury, and those who love a good read.

Dr. Fields states “Today we know that Glia constitute another brain that was ignored for a century or more… Unraveling this part of the brain is such a daunting task that only in the last few years have new brain imaging techniques allowed scientists to venture into the white matter realm. As we will see later, these new findings are changing fundamental concepts about how the brain processes and stores information—how we learn. Here inside the blank white regions of the brain, Glia are the heart of the mechanism.”

“A revolution in our understanding of how the brain is built, how it functions, how it fails in mental illness and disease, and how it is repaired has been ignited with the recent exploration of these long neglected brain cells—Glia are the key to understanding this new view of the brain”

 

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 31 March 2010 19:22 )
 

Brain Articles

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"The Elastic Brain" by Katherine Ellison

Glial Cell, Science Illustratred, July/August 2010

 

"Brain Cells at the Breaking Point", pp 11 Science News, March 13, 2010

 

"Ministroke" effects often missed, pp 15 Science News, March 27, 2010

 

"Neurons, Glia, and Their Systemic Interactions" pp 220-222, Energy Medicine in Therapetics and Human Performance, by James Oschman

 

Brain Rehabiliation:  The Gorilla in the Room

 

"Scans can find tiny injuries to brain" Associated Press, November 10, 2009

 

"Blood test for brain injuries gains momentum" March 31, 2009

 

"The Double Life of ATP", Scientific American, December 2009

 

"Post Concussion Syndrome Response to Hyperbaric Oxygen- A Case Report" Joseph, A(1), Dickey,J(2), Baker, M(3).  1 Sports Medicine Idaho State University, Pocatello, Idaho USA; 2 Depts of Psychology & Family Medicine Residency, Idaho State U; 3 Idaho Hyperbarics & Wound Care, Pocatello, Idaho USA

"A Light in the Brain" Scientific American, January 2010

 

"Toxic Gas, Lifesaver" Scientific American March 2010

 

"The Brain's Dark Energy"  Scientific American March 2010

Last Updated ( Friday, 30 July 2010 15:05 )
 

Median Nerve Stimulation

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A case of persistent vegetative state treated with median nerve stimulation

Katsuyasu Yamamoto, Shunsuke Sugita, Kazufami Ishikawa, Hitoshi Morimitsu, Houtesu Shimamoto, Minoru Shigemori

Department of Neurosugery, Kurume University School of Medicine

1. Introduction

Owing to rapid advancements in neurosurgery, the number of patients with severe

brain injury due to cerebrovascular disorder, whos lives can be saved, has increased. Along with this phenomenon, however, the number of patients with persistent vegetative state has been increasing, and thus constitutes an important issue. No effective treatment method for persistent vegetative state has been established but some reports have recently shown that spinal epidural stimulation and median nerve stimulation are effective. However, the mechanisms of action of these methods, activation of nerve cells and increased cerebral blood flow, are unknown. We employed median nerve stimulation for a patient with persistent vegetative state due to an injury sustained in a traffic accident and obtained interesting results in terms of the patient’s cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) findings.

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Electrical Stimulation

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Author: Carrie Sussman, PT

Note: This paper on electrical stimulation for wound healing has been excerpted from: Chapter 16, Sussman, C and Byl, N, Electrical Stimulation for Wound Healing, Wound Care Collaborative Practice Manual for Physical Therapists and Nurses, Sussman, C. And Bates-Jensen, BM, Aspen Publishers 1998.
DEFINITIONS:
Electrical stimulation is defined as the use of an electrical current to transfer energy to a wound. The type of electricity that is transferred is controlled by the electrical source. ( AHCPR 94). Capacitatively coupled electrical stimulation involves the transfer of electric current through an applied surface electrode pad that is in wet (electrolytic) contact ( capacitatively coupled) with the external skin surface and /or wound bed. When capacitatively coupled electrical stimulation is used, two electrodes are required to complete the electric circuit. Electrodes are usually placed over wet conductive medium, in the wound bed and on the skin a distance away from the wound.
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Scientists Verify Treatment For Old Brain Injuries

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Could Help The Almost 400,000 Brain Injured Service Members And Veterans Returning From Iraq.

Today, the prestigious peer-reviewed journal, Brain Research, published an article that verifies rats with an old traumatic brain injury can be healed with a protocol perfected by treating humans since 1978.  Traumatic brain injury is a condition that denies oxygen to certain parts of the brain which causes inflammation, cell death, and loss of use.  Intermittent treatments with pure oxygen, called Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) saturate these oxygen-deprived tissues with up to 10X the amount of oxygen we breathe.  HBOT has now been shown to restore function and heal these old brain injuries. It is approved for other kinds of wound care.

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About Raymond Cralle

Raymond Crallé has been a practicing Physical Therapist for 39 years, most of that time in his own private practice. There is no physician ownership since Crallé was one of the original private practices in Florida founded by his mother Ruth Crallé in 1957. Read More

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