Background Spasticity and spastic dystonia are two separate phenomena of the upper motor neuron syndrome. Spasticity is clinically defined by velocity-dependent hypertonia and tendon jerk hyperreflexia due to the hyper-excitability of the stretch reflex. Spastic dystonia is the inability to relax a muscle leading to a spontaneous tonic contraction. Both spasticity and spastic dystonia are present in patients who are at rest; however, only patients with spasticity are actually able to kept their muscles relaxed prior to muscle stretch. The idea that has inspired the present work is that also in patients with spastic dystonia the stretch reflex is likely to be hyper-excitable. Therefore, velocity-dependent hypertonia could be mediated not on...
Almost a century ago, Sherrington transected a cat's brain stem above the vestibular nucleus and pro...
In neurological diseases, muscles often become hyper-resistant to stretch due to hyperreflexia, an e...
de Niet M, Latour H, Hendricks H, Geurts AC, Weerdesteyn V. Short-latency stretch reflexes do not co...
BACKGROUND: Spasticity and spastic dystonia are two separate phenomena of the upper motor neuron sy...
Objective: To investigate prevalence of EMG patterns underlying hypertonia in multiple sclerosis (MS...
Spasticity is the velocity-dependent increase in muscle tone due to the exaggeration of stretch refl...
Objective Spastic dystonia is one of the positive phenomena of the upper motor neuron syndrome (UMNS...
Objective: Spastic dystonia is one of the positive phenomena of the upper motor neuron syndrome (UMN...
Spasticity is the velocity-dependent hypertonia frequently encountered in patients affected by Upper...
In a clinical setting, where motor-driven systems are not readily available, the major difficulty in...
Background: Spasticity, an increased resistance of a limb to movement, is associated with functional...
Antispastic medications that are directed to reduce clinical signs of spasticity, such as exaggerate...
In neurological diseases, muscles often become hyper-resistant to stretch due to hyperreflexia, an e...
In hypertonic muscles of patients with upper motor neuron syndrome (UMNS), investigation with surfac...
In a clinical setting, where motor-driven systems are not readily available, the major difficulty in...
Almost a century ago, Sherrington transected a cat's brain stem above the vestibular nucleus and pro...
In neurological diseases, muscles often become hyper-resistant to stretch due to hyperreflexia, an e...
de Niet M, Latour H, Hendricks H, Geurts AC, Weerdesteyn V. Short-latency stretch reflexes do not co...
BACKGROUND: Spasticity and spastic dystonia are two separate phenomena of the upper motor neuron sy...
Objective: To investigate prevalence of EMG patterns underlying hypertonia in multiple sclerosis (MS...
Spasticity is the velocity-dependent increase in muscle tone due to the exaggeration of stretch refl...
Objective Spastic dystonia is one of the positive phenomena of the upper motor neuron syndrome (UMNS...
Objective: Spastic dystonia is one of the positive phenomena of the upper motor neuron syndrome (UMN...
Spasticity is the velocity-dependent hypertonia frequently encountered in patients affected by Upper...
In a clinical setting, where motor-driven systems are not readily available, the major difficulty in...
Background: Spasticity, an increased resistance of a limb to movement, is associated with functional...
Antispastic medications that are directed to reduce clinical signs of spasticity, such as exaggerate...
In neurological diseases, muscles often become hyper-resistant to stretch due to hyperreflexia, an e...
In hypertonic muscles of patients with upper motor neuron syndrome (UMNS), investigation with surfac...
In a clinical setting, where motor-driven systems are not readily available, the major difficulty in...
Almost a century ago, Sherrington transected a cat's brain stem above the vestibular nucleus and pro...
In neurological diseases, muscles often become hyper-resistant to stretch due to hyperreflexia, an e...
de Niet M, Latour H, Hendricks H, Geurts AC, Weerdesteyn V. Short-latency stretch reflexes do not co...