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1.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM (Western Pacific) | ID: wpr-1038293

ABSTRACT

ObjectiveTo analyze the trends, cooperation, topics and hotspots of researches about multi-level rehabilitation service system in China. MethodsThe literature on multi-level rehabilitation service system in China was searched and screened in databases of CNKI from 1983 to 2023. The number of the articles was described, and the cooperation, research hotspots and changing trend were analyzed using VOSviewer. ResultsA total of 4 643 articles were included. The number of the articles tended to increase and developed in stages. Nine groups with five or more researchers were found, and seven of them cooperated with each other. The most frequent keywords were community-based rehabilitation (occurrence 1 251 with connection strength 1 780), stroke (occurrence 674 with connection strength 1 126), family rehabilitation (occurrence 412 with connection strength 514), rehabilitation nursing (occurrence 178 with connection strength 240) and quality of life (occurrence 156 with connection strength 311). The researchers initially focused on disability rehabilitation, then focused on community-based rehabilitation and family rehabilitation, and gradually focused on the quality of life, activities of daily living, satisfaction, mental health, negative emotion and healthcare consortium in recent years. ConclusionThe researches about multi-level rehabilitation service system are developing in China, focusing on community-based rehabilitation, stroke, family rehabilitation, rehabilitation nursing and quality of life. The cooperation among scholar groups need to be strengthened. Quality of life, activities of daily living, satisfaction, mental health, negative emotion and healthcare consortium may be the hotspots in the future.

2.
Chinese Journal of Neuromedicine ; (12): 618-622, 2023.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM (Western Pacific) | ID: wpr-1035857

ABSTRACT

At present, neuroimaging and neuroelectrophysiology are the main objective detection techniques of brain consciousness; and neuroimaging includes functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS). As a new non-invasive optical neuroimaging technology, fNIRS has more application prospects than fMRI: it can clear the cerebral cortex activation in resting state or different task states, such as real movement, motor imagination, or mental arithmetic; it can not only assess the consciousness horizontally, but also evaluate the effect of rehabilitation therapy vertically. In this paper, the application status of fNIRS in assessing consciousness of disorder is reviewed to explore new technical evaluation means for disorder of consciousness.

3.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM (Western Pacific) | ID: wpr-885627

ABSTRACT

Objective:To observe the effects of static 70° head-up tilted standing and of repeated body repositioning on hemodynamics in healthy young and middle-aged persons.Methods:The hemodynamics of 24 middle-aged and 23 younger persons were studied. Both groups were requested to perform static 70° head-up tilted standing and to repeatedly change their body position from 0° to 70° of tilt at a velocity of 1°/second for ten minutes in a random order. Before, between and after each test the subjects rested supine for ten minutes. Hemodynamic variables and blood pressure were recorded non-invasively.Results:The average heart rate (HR) increased significantly in both groups when rising from supine to the testing positions. In 70° tilted standing the average HR of the youth group, 84.0±9.5bpm, was significantly higher than that in the other position and that of the middle-aged group in the same position. The average HR of the middle-aged group in 70° tilted standing was also significantly higher than in the other position. Among the middle-aged group, the average stroke volume (SV) in the testing positions was significantly lower than when resting. Significant differences were observed in the average diastolic blood pressure (DBP) between the testing and rest positions for both groups, with the average DBP of the middle-aged group significantly higher than that of the youth group in all three positions. Among the youth group, the average SV, CO and systolic blood pressure (SBP) of the males were significantly higher than among the females in all of the different body positions.Conclusions:Young persons mainly rely on an increased heart rate to maintain cardiac output while middle-aged participants appear to achieve this through increased peripheral resistance. Repeated position changes have less impact on hemodynamics than 70° inclined standing, making it a safer and more stable training method. However, the long-term effects of such intervention need to be confirmed in further studies.

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