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Hemiplegia

Hemiplegia is a condition where a vertical half of a patient's body is paralyzed, i.e. one arm and its corresponding leg do not function. It is usually the result of a stroke, although disease processes affecting the spinal cord and other diseases affecting the hemispheres are equally capable of producing this clinical state. more...

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Cerebral palsy can also affect one hemisphere, resulting in limited function. This does not cause paralysis but instead causes spasms. Cerebral palsy where this is the only symptom is often refered just as hemiplegia.

Hemiplegia is similar to hemiparesis, but hemiparesis is considered less severe.

Reference

  • Patten C, Lexell J, Brown HE. Weakness and strength training in persons with poststroke hemiplegia: Rationale, method, and efficacy. J Rehab Res Dev 2004;41:293-312. Fulltext. PMID 15543447.

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Bone age asymmetry and lower limb growth in spastic hemiplegia
From Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, 1/1/03 by F, Plasschaert

A chance observation of asymmetrical hone ages in a child with spastic hemiplegia stimulated a prospective gathering of bilateral hand radiographs in 33 hemiplegic patients, and on a single occasion in a control group of 23 patients with leg length discrepancy in the absence of neurological disorder. The bone age assessments according to Greulich and Pyle, which by convention has used the left hand only, were done by a single expert observer blinded to the clinical details.

13 hemiplegic patients (39%) had delayed bone ages of 6 months or more. When present it was always delayed on the hemiplegic side. The mean delay for the whole group was 2.5 months, whereas there was no mean difference in the control group (p = 0.001). The oldest bone age with asymmetry was 14.5 years in males and 12 years in females, indicating that when present the delay "catches up" in the last 2-3 years of growth.

In hemiplegia the percentage leg length discrepancy also tends to decrease during later growth, and after 80% of growth the hemiplegic side outgrows the normal leg by a mean of 0.3cm/year. No correlation could be found between the delay of bone age and the severity of either the neurological abnormality or the actual discrepancy of length. The implications for clinical management will be discussed.

Plasschaert, F, Bouwen L, Andrews R, Patrick J, Evans G.

Robert Jones and Agnes Hunt Orthopaedic Hospital, Oswestry, U.K.

Copyright British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery 2003
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights Reserved

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