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1.
The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine ; : 799-804, 2023.
Artigo em Japonês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-1007157

RESUMO

This report describes a case of an amputee with a lumber spinal cord injury who successfully recovered ambulation with the use of prosthesis.A 30-year-old man with schizophrenia underwent amputation of the lower legs and concurrently developed lumbar spinal cord injury from of a suicide attempt. After the treatment of stump plasty and posterior fusion, the patient was transferred to our facility. Lower-extremity prostheses for both legs were fitted, and orthostatic training was commenced following admission. During the initial evaluation, the patient could not maintain a stable standing position because of weakness in the hip extensor muscle. An inflexion angle of the prosthesis was set to 0° to extend the knee joint and achieve standing stability. Appropriate adjustments of the prosthesis were made as required, specifically addressing the paraplegia caused by his lumbar spinal cord injury. Thus, the patient successfully regained ambulation with the treatment.Recovering walking independence after bilateral lower leg amputations or paraplegia caused by lumber spinal cord injury is not uncommon. However, this case is unique in that the muscle weakness caused by lumbar spinal cord injury presented unforeseen difficulties for the patient to achieve ambulation, which is not ordinarily observed in amputation rehabilitation cases. No similar cases have been reported in which patients concurrently suffered from both these conditions in Japan;therefore, this case is extremely rare.

2.
The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine ; : 23025-2023.
Artigo em Japonês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-1006936

RESUMO

This report describes a case of an amputee with a lumber spinal cord injury who successfully recovered ambulation with the use of prosthesis.A 30-year-old man with schizophrenia underwent amputation of the lower legs and concurrently developed lumbar spinal cord injury from of a suicide attempt. After the treatment of stump plasty and posterior fusion, the patient was transferred to our facility. Lower-extremity prostheses for both legs were fitted, and orthostatic training was commenced following admission. During the initial evaluation, the patient could not maintain a stable standing position because of weakness in the hip extensor muscle. An inflexion angle of the prosthesis was set to 0° to extend the knee joint and achieve standing stability. Appropriate adjustments of the prosthesis were made as required, specifically addressing the paraplegia caused by his lumbar spinal cord injury. Thus, the patient successfully regained ambulation with the treatment.Recovering walking independence after bilateral lower leg amputations or paraplegia caused by lumber spinal cord injury is not uncommon. However, this case is unique in that the muscle weakness caused by lumbar spinal cord injury presented unforeseen difficulties for the patient to achieve ambulation, which is not ordinarily observed in amputation rehabilitation cases. No similar cases have been reported in which patients concurrently suffered from both these conditions in Japan;therefore, this case is extremely rare.

3.
The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine ; : 889-893, 2017.
Artigo em Japonês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-379470

RESUMO

<p>For lower limb amputees, good prosthetic fittings are important for wearing prostheses while ensuring gait stability, without skin breakdown. Poor prosthetic fittings tend to occur in the early stage after amputation because of significant changes in residual limb volume. We measured the extent of change in residual limb volume in three below-the-knee amputees by using computed tomography. The measurements were performed before and after inpatient rehabilitation for the first prosthesis. The measurement showed a remarkable change in residual limb volume in a highly active amputee without complications. In contrast, the change in residual limb volume was small in two less active below-the-knee amputees with serious complications, such as heart and renal failures. Generally, to maintain good prosthetic fittings, the first prostheses should be made during inpatient rehabilitation to facilitate maturation of the residual limbs. For the less active below-knee amputees, the prostheses could be made in the outpatient settings because the volume fluctuations of their residual limbs are small and the functional requirements for their daily living are modest.</p>

4.
The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine ; : 583-587, 2009.
Artigo em Japonês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-362229

RESUMO

Severe burn injuries often result in significant long-term physical complications with scarring and contractures, but cancers associated with chronic burn scars are relatively rare. We report a case of a 58-year-old man with skin cancer arising from a healed burn scar. He initially suffered from an extensive fire burn on both lower limbs as a child. The burn scars extended from his upper thighs to his toes bilaterally and caused severe contractures which immobilized the ankles in plantar flexion. Two years ago, he noticed a small ulcerated lesion on the right heel and self-treated it with topical ointments. However, the ulcer increased in size and became malodorous. He presented to a clinic with a large, ulcerated, tumorous lesion, and histology proved it to be squamous cell carcinoma. He subsequently underwent a right below-the-knee amputation, and the previous scars presented on the stump. Thus the patient received a total surface bearing prosthesis with an Icelandic roll-on silicone socket system, which is ideal for patients with extensive scarring at the stump because it may reduce prosthesis-induced stump injuries by evenly distributing the patient's weight in the socket. After he left the hospital, he walked so far with the prosthesis every day that small ulcers often developed at the right popliteal fossa. However, he did not take care to treat these lesions properly, so we had to educate him on how to treat them. Patients such as these will often require education for self-management, family involvement and regular follow-up to monitor scar ulceration and watch out for any malignant transformation.

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