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1.
Physiotherapy ; 124: 143-153, 2024 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38901217

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Exercise, support and advice are the key treatment strategies of musculoskeletal problems. The aims of this study were to determine patients', physiotherapists', and other stakeholders' perspectives about supported home physiotherapy for the management of musculoskeletal problems and to identify the barriers and facilitators to rolling out this model of physiotherapy service delivery. METHODS: This study was conducted as part of a process evaluation run alongside a large trial designed to determine whether supported home physiotherapy is as good or better than a course of in-person physiotherapy. Forty interviews were conducted with 20 trial participants, 15 physiotherapists, and 5 other stakeholders. The interviews were semi-structured and based on interview guides. Each interview was transcribed and a three-tiered coding tree was developed. RESULTS: Six key themes were identified. Supported home physiotherapy (i) is convenient for some patients, (ii) does not always align with patients' and therapists' expectations about treatment (iii) is suitable for some but not all, (iv) can reduce personal connection and accountability, (v) has implications for physiotherapists' workloads, and (vi) has barriers and facilitators to future implementation. CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest that patients are far more accepting of supported home physiotherapy than physiotherapists assume. This model of service delivery could be rolled out to improve access to physiotherapy and to provide a convenient and effective way of delivering physiotherapy to some patients with musculoskeletal conditions if our trial results indicate that supported home physiotherapy is as good or better than in-person physiotherapy. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRY NUMBER: ACTRN12619000065190 CONTRIBUTIONS OF THIS PAPER.

2.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys ; 102(4): 1276-1286, 2018 11 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30355463

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To develop and apply an image acquisition and analysis strategy for spatial comparison of computed tomography (CT)-ventilation images with hyperpolarized gas magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). METHODS AND MATERIALS: Eleven lung cancer patients underwent xenon-129 (129Xe) and helium-3 (3He) ventilation MRI and coregistered proton (1H) anatomic MRI. Expiratory and inspiratory breath-hold CTs were used for deformable image registration and calculation of 3 CT-ventilation metrics: Hounsfield unit (CTHU), Jacobian (CTJac), and specific gas volume change (CTSGV). Inspiration CT and hyperpolarized gas ventilation MRI were registered via same-breath anatomic 1H-MRI. Voxel-wise Spearman correlation coefficients were calculated between each CT-ventilation image and its corresponding 3He-/129Xe-MRI, and for the mean values in regions of interest (ROIs) ranging from fine to coarse in-plane dimensions of 5 × 5, 10 × 10, 15 × 15, and 20 × 20, located within the lungs as defined by the same-breath 1H-MRI lung mask. Correlation of 3He and 129Xe-MRI was also assessed. RESULTS: Spatial correlation of CT-ventilation against 3He/129Xe-MRI increased with ROI size. For example, for CTHU, mean ± SD Spearman coefficients were 0.37 ± 0.19/0.33 ± 0.17 at the voxel-level and 0.52 ± 0.20/0.51 ± 0.18 for 20 × 20 ROIs, respectively. Correlations were stronger for CTHU than for CTJac or CTSGV. Correlation of 3He with 129Xe-MRI was consistently higher than either gas against CT-ventilation maps over all ROIs (P < .05). No significant differences were observed between CT-ventilation versus 3He-MRI and CT-ventilation versus 129Xe-MRI. CONCLUSION: Comparison of ventilation-related measures from CT and registered hyperpolarized gas MRI is feasible at a voxel level using a dedicated acquisition and analysis protocol. Moderate correlation between CT-ventilation and MRI exists at a regional level. Correlation between MRI and CT is significantly less than that between 3He and 129Xe-MRI, suggesting that CT-ventilation surrogate measures may not be measuring lung ventilation alone.


Subject(s)
Helium , Isotopes , Lung Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Pulmonary Ventilation , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Xenon Isotopes , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Lung Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Lung Neoplasms/physiopathology , Male , Middle Aged
3.
Biol Open ; 7(8)2018 Aug 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30082274

ABSTRACT

The ability to recover purposeful movement soon after debilitating neuromuscular injury is essential to animal survival. Various neural and mechanical mechanisms exist to preserve whole-limb kinematics despite exhibiting long-term deficits of individual joints following peripheral nerve injury. However, it is unclear whether functionally relevant whole-limb movement is acutely conserved following injury. Therefore, the objective of this longitudinal study of the injury response from four individual cats was to test the hypothesis that whole-limb length is conserved following localized nerve injury of ankle extensors in cats with intact nervous systems. The primary finding of our study was that whole-limb kinematics during walking was not immediately preserved following peripheral nerve injuries that paralyzed subsets of ankle extensor muscles. Instead, whole-limb kinematics recovered gradually over multiple weeks, despite having the mechanical capacity of injury-spared muscles across all joints to achieve immediate functional recovery. The time taken to achieve complete recovery of whole-limb kinematics is consistent with an underlying process that relies on neuromuscular adaptation. Importantly, the gradual recovery of ankle joint kinematics remained incomplete, discontinuing once whole-limb kinematics had fully recovered. These findings support the hypothesis that a whole-limb representation of healthy limb function guides a locomotor compensation strategy after neuromuscular injury that arrests progressive changes in the joint kinematics once whole-limb kinematics is regained.

4.
Phys Med Biol ; 62(17): 7114-7130, 2017 Aug 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28800298

ABSTRACT

To investigate the effect of beam angles and field number on functionally-guided intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) normal lung avoidance treatment plans that incorporate hyperpolarised helium-3 magnetic resonance imaging (3He MRI) ventilation data. Eight non-small cell lung cancer patients had pre-treatment 3He MRI that was registered to inspiration breath-hold radiotherapy planning computed tomography. IMRT plans that minimised the volume of total lung receiving ⩾20 Gy (V20) were compared with plans that minimised 3He MRI defined functional lung receiving ⩾20 Gy (fV20). Coplanar IMRT plans using 5-field manually optimised beam angles and 9-field equidistant plans were also evaluated. For each pair of plans, the Wilcoxon signed ranks test was used to compare fV20 and the percentage of planning target volume (PTV) receiving 90% of the prescription dose (PTV90). Incorporation of 3He MRI led to median reductions in fV20 of 1.3% (range: 0.2-9.3%; p = 0.04) and 0.2% (range: 0 to 4.1%; p = 0.012) for 5- and 9-field arrangements, respectively. There was no clinically significant difference in target coverage. Functionally-guided IMRT plans incorporating hyperpolarised 3He MRI information can reduce the dose received by ventilated lung without comprising PTV coverage. The effect was greater for optimised beam angles rather than uniformly spaced fields.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung/radiotherapy , Lung Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted/methods , Radiotherapy, Image-Guided/methods , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung/diagnostic imaging , Female , Helium/metabolism , Humans , Isotopes/metabolism , Lung Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Radiotherapy Dosage , Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated/methods
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