Self-assessed secondary difficulties among paralytic poliomyelitis and spinal cord injury survivors in Japan

Kumakura N, Takayanagi M, Hasegawa T, Ihara K, Yano H, Kimizuka M. Self-assessed secondary difficulties among paralytic poliomyelitis and spinal cord injury survivors in Japan. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2002;83:1245-51. Objective: To determine the time course of secondary worsening of difficulties (SWD)...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation 2002-09, Vol.83 (9), p.1245-1251
Hauptverfasser: Kumakura, Nobuhiro, Takayanagi, Makiko, Hasegawa, Tomonori, Ihara, Kazushige, Yano, Hideo, Kimizuka, Mamori
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Kumakura N, Takayanagi M, Hasegawa T, Ihara K, Yano H, Kimizuka M. Self-assessed secondary difficulties among paralytic poliomyelitis and spinal cord injury survivors in Japan. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2002;83:1245-51. Objective: To determine the time course of secondary worsening of difficulties (SWD) experienced by postpolio and spinal cord injury (SCI) subjects in the general population. Design: Self-report survey. Setting: Multicenter study in general community in Japan. Participants: A total of 662 postpolio and 736 SCI subjects who had had contact with some rehabilitation facility. Interventions: Not applicable. Main Outcome Measures: Respondents completed a questionnaire about demographic factors, physical complaints, activities of daily living (ADLs), social participation, and a visual analog scale of time course for difficulties (VAST-D) devised for the present study in which the subjects drew a single curve to indicate the lifetime course of disability as they perceived it. Results: Signs of SWD in all extremities of the polio patients and in the upper extremities of the SCI subjects were visually shown by the VAST-D. Additionally, the prevalence of postpolio syndrome and SWD in the SCI group was estimated to be 55.3% and 45.1%, respectively. Conclusions: SWD was visually shown by the VAST-D in polio and SCI subjects. © 2002 by the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
ISSN:0003-9993
1532-821X
DOI:10.1053/apmr.2002.34273