the poster display - dc conferences poster display is located within ... nordic walking technique...
TRANSCRIPT
Poster Presentations
The poster display
is located within
the exhibition area,
in the main foyer.
Abstracts for all posters
will be published in the
July 2012 issue of the
Journal for
Neurorehabilitation
Repair.
197
198
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
1 306 Shanping Mao (China) SCHISANDRIN B PROTECTS Aβ25-35-INDUCED PC12 CELLS VIA APP AND VPS35
2 375 Camila Fiore (Australia) A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF LOCOMOTOR TRAINING AS A THERAPY IN ANIMAL MODELS OF SPINAL CORD INJURY
3 531 Shanping Mao (China) TANSHINONE IIA PROTECTS PC12 CELLS FROM β-AMYLOID25–35- INDUCED APOPTOSIS VIA PI3K/AKT SIGNALING PATHWAY
4 565 Pradeep Kumar (South Africa) POLYPHENOL-FLAVONOL SYNERGISTIC PARADIGM FOR NEURAL REPAIR: COMBINATORIAL COMPUTATIONAL MODELING APPROACH FOR POST-TRAUMATIC M-CALPAIN INACTIVATION
5 12 Bhasker Amatya (Australia) REHABILITATION FOR CEREBRAL PALSY: ANALYSIS OF THE AUSTRALIAN REHABILITATION OUTCOME DATASET
6 31 Gita Handa Thukral (India) PROSPECTIVE EVALUATION OF CO-MORBIDITIES IN PATIENTS WITH CEREBRAL PALSY AND ITS RELATION TO THEBLADDER FUNCTION
7 106 Roslyn Boyd (Australia) RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN STRUCTURAL BRAIN CONNECTIVITY AND TREATMENT RESPONSE FOLLOWING INTENSIVE UPPER LIMB TRAINING IN CONGENITAL HEMIPLEGIA
8 107 Roslyn Boyd (Australia) SAFETY OF BOTULINUM TOXIN-A IN A DOUBLE BLIND SHAM CONTROLLED TRIAL OF CHILDREN WITH MARKEDCEREBRAL PALSY TO IMPROVE CARE AND COMFORT
9 108 Roslyn Boyd (Australia) DOUBLE BLIND RANDOMIZED TRIAL OF BOTULINUM TOXIN-A AND THERAPY COMPARED TO SHAM AND THERAPY FOR CARE AND COMFORT GOALS IN CHILDREN WITH MARKED CEREBRAL PALSY
10 139 Ana Paula Cunha Loureiro (Brazil) THE PRACTICE OF BRAZILIN JIU-JITSU ORIENTED BY CONCEPTS OF FACILITATE INHIBITION NEUROMUSCULARFACILITATION AND FUNCTIONALITY OF YOUNG WITH CEREBRAL PALSY
11 204 Jana Sussova (Czech Republic) MEDICAL CARE PROBLEMS IN ADULTS WITH CEREBRAL PALSY
12 291 Jasmina Milovanovic-Arsic (Serbia) THE EFFECTS OF HABILITATION TREATMENT ON ESTABLISHING MOTOR FUNCTIONS IN CHILDREN WITH CEREBRAL PALSY IN THE SPECIALIZED REHABILITATION HOSPITAL IN BANJA KOVILJACA
14 302 Keh-chung Lin (Taiwan) CLINIMETRIC PROPERTIES OF THE PEDIATRIC MOTOR ACTIVITY LOG IN: CHILDREN WITH CEREBRAL PALSY RECEIVING REHABILITATION
15 391 Izumi Kondo (Japan) RASCH ANALYSIS OF FUNCTIONAL SKILLS EVALUATED WITH USING PEDIATRIC EVALUATION OF DISABILITY INVENTORY (PEDI) FOR CHILDREN WITH CEREBRAL PALSY
16 398 Belinda McLean (Australia) LIFE BEYOND MOBILITY FOR NON-AMBULANT CHILDREN WITH CEREBRAL PALSY
17 466 Zsofia Nádasi (Hungary) ORTHOPAEDIC SURGERY IN CHILDREN WITH CEREBRAL PALSY
18 495 Arve Opheim (Norway) GAIT ANALYSIS IN ADULTS WITH SPASTIC BILATERAL CEREBRAL PALSY
19 509 Liliana Padure (Romania) THE INFLUENCE OF PARENTING STYLE IN THE EVOLUTION OF CHILD WITH CEREBRAL PALSY (CP)
20 571 Hilal KEKLiCEK (Turkey) EFFECTS OF HAND TAPING ON UPPER EXTREMITY FUNCTION IN CHILDREN WITH CEREBRAL PALSY
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
199
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
21 591 Thaís Rodrigues (Brazil) EFFECTIVENESS OF VIRTUAL REALITY USING WII GAMING IN THE TREATMENT OF CEREBRAL PALSY
22 285 Caterina Pistarini (Italy) VIEW OF AN INTEGRATED EBM-NBM MODEL FOR RESEARCH IN NEURO-REHABILITATION
23 474 Matilde Leonardi (Italy) COURAGE IN EUROPE PROJECT: AN ICF-BASED SURVEY ON AGEING IN EUROPE
24 70 Margaret Rae (Australia) AN ESSENTIAL TOOLBOX FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF A PAEDIATRIC ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY AMBULATORYAND OUTREACH SERVICE
25 167 Sheila Lennon (Australia) CONSTRAINT INDUCED MOVEMENT THERAPY (CIMT) FOR PATIENTS POST ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY: QUANTITATIVE RESULTS FROM A CLINICAL FEASIBILITY RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL (RCT)
26 397 Yoshito Matsubayashi (Japan) INFLUENCES OF A SHORT-TERM LOW-FREQUENCY MOTOR FUNCTION IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM ON COGNITIVE AND PHYSICAL FUNCTIONS
27 58 Shinsuke Sato (Japan) EVALUATION OF TRUNK SWAY IN SIT-TO-STAND MOTION USING A PRESSURE DISTRIBUTION MEASUREMENT SYSTEM: LATERALITY OF FOOT PRESSURE IN SIT-TO-STAND MOTION
28 62 Oliver Stoller (Switzerland) EVALUATION OF ROBOTICS-ASSISTED GAIT REHABILITATION USING INTEGRATED BIOFEEDBACK IN NEUROLOGIC DISORDERS
30 388 K Ozaki (Japan) PRELIMINARY REPORT OF BALANCE EXERCISE BY USING A PERSONAL TRANSPORT ASSISTANCE ROBOT FOR PATIENTS WITH CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM DISORDER
31 505 Christina Brogårdh (Sweden) RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN OBJECTIVELY AND SUBJECTIVELY ASSESSED GAIT PERFORMANCE IN PERSONS WITH POST-POLIO SYNDROME
32 510 Christina Brogårdh (Sweden) RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN MUSCLE STRENGTH AND GAIT PERFORMANCE IN PERSONS WITH POST-POLIO SYNDROME
33 547 Satoshi Hirano (Japan) THE ENERGY CONSUMPTION AND THE DISPLACEMENT OF THE CENTER OF GRAVITY BETWEEN PRIMEWALK AND WPAL
34 625 Oliver Amft (Netherlands) NORDIC WALKING TECHNIQUE ASSESSMENT USING INERTIAL SENSORS
35 272 Yong Il Shin (South Korea) FUNCTIONAL ELECTRICAL STIMULATION & VOLUNTARY CONTRACTION INDUCED BRAIN ACTIVATION BY FMRI
36 280 Ettie Ben-Shabat (Australia) IMPAIRED PROPRIOCEPTIVE PERCEPTION AFTER STROKE: A FUNCTIONAL MRI STUDY
37 312 Yun-An Tsai (Taiwan) MOTOR CORTEX EXCITABILITY FOLLOWING FINGER EXTENSION EXERCISE WITH VOLITIONALLY DRIVED ELECTRICAL STIMULATION AND TRANSCRANIAL DIRECT CURRENT STIMULATION
41 362 Woo Jin Kim (South Korea) NEURAL SUBSTRATE RESPONSIBLE FOR CROSSED APHASIA
42 389 Susan Hillier (Australia) INCORPORATING SENSORY AWARENESS TRAINING IN NEURO-REHABILITATION
43 413 Peggy Christie (Australia) ‘IS THIS NEUROPLASTICITY AT WORK’: FIVE CASE STUDIES FROM A COMMUNITY BASED REHABILITATION PROGRAMME.
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
200
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
44 444 Eizaburo Suzuki (Japan) THE DIFFERENT CONTRIBUTION OF PREMOTOR CORTEX IN BOTH HEMISPHERES TO CONTROLLING RESPONSE INHIBITION
45 484 Youn Joo Kang (South Korea) FACILITATION OF CORTICOSPINAL EXCITABILITY OF VIRTUAL REALITY EXERCISE FOLLOWING ANODAL TDCS
46 1 Louisa Ng (Australia) USE OF THE INTERNATIONAL CLASSIFICATION OF FUNCTIONING, DISABILITY AND HEALTH TO DESCRIBE PATIENT-REPORTED DISABILITY: COMPARING MOTOR NEURONE DISEASE, GUILLAIN-BARRE SYNDROME AND MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS IN AN AUSTRALIAN COHORT
47 2 Louisa Ng (Australia) USE OF THE INTERNATIONAL CLASSIFICATION OF FUNCTIONING, DISABILITY AND HEALTH: COMPARING THE IMPACT OF MOTOR NEURONE DISEASE ON PATIENTS AND THEIR CAREGIVERS
48 57 Richard Siegert (United Kingdom) THE NEEDS AND PROVISIONS COMPLEXITY SCALE (NPCS): FACTOR STRUCTURE AND REPEATABILITY
49 131 Richard Siegert (United Kingdom) THE NEEDS AND PROVISIONS COMPLEXITY SCALE: MEASURING MET AND UNMET NEEDS IN THE COMMUNITY FOR PATIENTS WITH COMPLEX NEUROLOGICAL DISABILITIES
50 313 Matilde Leonardi (Italy) FUNCTIONING OF WORKERS WITH PARKINSON’S DISEASE: AN OBSERVATIONAL STUDY TO DEFINE A TAILORED ICF CHECKLIST
51 314 Matilde Leonardi (Italy) USE OF ICF CATEGORIES IN PATIENTS WITH MYASTHENIA GRAVIS, MIGRAINE AND PARKINSON’S DISEASE: SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCES
52 315 Matilde Leonardi (Italy) DESCRIBING FUNCTIONING OF STROKE PATIENTS WITH ICF
53 342 Annemie Spooren (Belgium) MOTOR TRAINING PROGRAMS OF ARM AND HAND ACCORDING TO DIFFERENT LEVELS OF THE ICF IN PATIENTS WITH MS: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW
54 13 Bhasker Amatya (Australia) REHABILITATION FOR PARKINSON’S DISEASE: ANALYSIS OF THE AUSTRALIAN REHABILITATION OUTCOME DATASET
55 18 Ana Paula Cunha Loureiro (Brazil) PHYSIOTHERAPEUTIC INTERVENTION ON PEOPLE WITH PARKINSON'S DISEASE, USING MANUAL THERAPEUTIC RESOURCES, AIMING TO IMPROVE NON MOTORS SYMPTOMS
56 63 Volker Tomantschger (Austria) DOES IN-PATIENT NEUROREHABILITATION LIVE UP TO EXPECTATIONS OF PATIENTS WITH PARKINSON’S DISEASE?
59 132 Ann Ashburn (United Kingdom) THE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN SPINAL POSTURE AND TURNING IN PEOPLE WITH PARKINSON'S DISEASE (DWD)
60 238 Natalie Allen (Australia) A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF PARTICIPANT CHARACTERISTICS, INTERVENTION DELIVERY, RETENTION RATES, ADHERENCE AND ADVERSE EVENTS IN CLINICAL TRIALS OF EXERCISE AND MOTOR TRAINING IN PEOPLE WITH PARKINSON'S DISEASE
61 251 Colleen Canning (Australia) MINIMALLY-SUPERVISED TREADMILL TRAINING FOR INDIVIDUALS WITH PARKINSON'S DISEASE: A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
62 279 Marten Munneke (Netherlands) EFFICACY OF A MULTIFACETED INTERVENTION PROGRAM TO INCREASE PHYSICAL ACTIVITY IN PATIENTS WITH PD: THE PARKFIT TRIAL
63 287 Marjolein A. van der Marck EFFICACY OF INTEGRATED MULTIDISCIPLINARY CARE IN PARKINSON’S DISEASE (Netherlands)
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
201
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
64 411 Sze-Ee Soh (Australia) PREDICTORS OF HEALTH-RELATED QUALITY OF LIFE IN AUSTRALIANS WITH PARKINSON'S DISEASE
65 464 Zsofia Nádasi (Hungary) OPPORTUNITIES OF HARMONIOUS COLLABORATION BETWEEN CONDUCTIVE EDUCATION AND MEDICAL REHABILITATION IN PATIENTS WITH PARKINSON’S DISEASE
66 496 Meg Morris (Australia) AUSTRALIAN CLINICAL GUIDELINES FOR PHYSIOTHERAPY MANAGEMENT OF PARKINSON’S DISEASE
67 520 Erwin van Wegen (Netherlands) EFFECTS OF MUSIC BASED MOVEMENT THERAPY ON WALKING ABILITY, BALANCE AND QUALITY OF LIFE IN PATIENTS WITH PARKINSON’S DISEASE: A META ANALYSIS
68 545 Giorgio Sandrini (Italy) CHARACTERISATION AND REHABILITATION OF PISA SYNDROME IN PARKINSON'S DISEASE
69 549 Ender Ayvat (Turkey) VALIDITY OF FULLERTON ADVANCED BALANCE SCALE IN PARKINSON’S DISEASE: PRELIMINARY RESULTS
70 585 Nicolas BAYLE (France) QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF MOVEMENT SMOOTHNESS IN PARKINSON’S DISEASE: A PRELIMINARY STUDY
71 597 Samyra Keus (Netherlands) EUROPEAN GUIDELINE FOR PHYSIOTHERAPY IN PARKINSON’S DISEASE
72 598 Samyra Keus (Netherlands) PARKINSON’S CARE: INSIGHT INTO PHYSIOTHERAPY WITHIN EUROPE
73 632 David Kelly (Australia) THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CAREGIVER STRAIN AND HEALTH-RELATED QUALITY OF LIFE IN CAREGIVERS AND PEOPLE WITH PARKINSON’S DISEASE
74 21 Fary Khan (Australia) OUTCOMES OF BLADDER REHABILITATION IN PERSONS WITH MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS: A RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL
75 322 Huiying Yu (United States) IDENTIFICATION OF GAIT PATTERNS IN MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS PATIENTS
76 463 Charlotte Chruzander (Sweden) CHANGES OVER 1O YEARS IN FUNCTIONING AND HEALTH RELATED QUALITY OF LIFE IN PEOPLE WITH MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS
77 498 Annemie Spooren (Netherlands) IDENTIFYING TREATMENT GOALS IN STROKE AND MS: WHAT METHOD TO USE?
78 542 yeliz salci (Turkey) INVESTIGATION OF MUSCULOSKELETAL PAIN IN TURKISH MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS POPULATION
79 544 ayla fil (Turkey) CONCURRENT VALIDITY OF BERG BALANCE SCALE IN MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS PATIENTS
80 15 Louisa Ng (Australia) NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL SEQUELAE IN MOTOR NEURONE DISEASE: OUTCOMES OF A PEER SUPPORT (LIFEMOVES) PROGRAM
82 42 INTAN SABRINA (Australia) KNOWLEDGE OF DYSPHAGIA AMONGST HEALTHCARE WORKERS IN MALAYSIA
83 117 INTAN SABRINA (Australia) REHABILITATION AWARENESS WEEK AS A TOOL TO ASSESS THE AWARENESS OF REHABILITATION IN A DEVELOPING COUNTRY
84 118 INTAN SABRINA (Australia) CHALLENGES IN REHABILITATING OVERWEIGHT AND OBESE SPINAL CORD INJURED PATIENTS:AN EXPERIENCE FROM MALAYSIA
85 119 INTAN SABRINA (Australia) THE COSTS OF BOWEL CARE IN SPINAL CORD INJURED PATIENTS – AN EXPERIENCE FROM MALAYSIA
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
202
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
86 338 Lingani Mbakile (Australia) THE EXPERIENCE OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN BOTSWANA
121 543 Simonetta Rossi (Italy) INDIVIDUAL REHABILITATION PLAN: RESOURCES IMPLICATION
131 5 Deirdre Cooke (Australia) THE PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES OF A NEW STANDARDISED AUSTRALIAN OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY SCREENING TOOL FOR VISUAL PERCEPTION AND PRAXIS
132 336 Megan Bishop (New Zealand) A CONCEPTS REVIEW OF THE THERAPEUTIC ALLIANCE IN BRAIN INJURY REHABILITATION
133 351 Seema Radhakrishnan (Australia) INTERDISCIPLINARY INPATIENT ASSESSMENTS AND MANAGEMENT OF HUNTINGTON DISEASE:A SHARED CARE ARRANGEMENT
134 420 Louise-Anne Jordan (Australia) PRACTICE CHANGE: RESPECTING THE BARRIERS
135 426 Lena Aadal (Denmark) CONCEPTUALISING INTENSIVE NEURO-REHABILITATION AS LEARNING DEVELOPMENT OF A DIDACTIC MODEL
136 529 Hitoshi Kagaya (Japan) KINEMATIC ANALYSIS OF LARYNGEAL ELEVATION WITH POWER-ASSISTED FUNCTIONAL ELECTRICAL STIMULATION
137 459 Julie Patrick Engkasan (Malaysia) DELIVERING THERAPY AT HOME: A PRELIMINARY RESULT
138 615 Claudio Corradini (Italy) BENEFITS AND PROBLEMS OF USING SURFACE FUNCTIONAL ELECTRIC STIMULATOR : PATIENTS' PERCEPTIONS
139 25 Jakob Lorentzen (Denmark) ASSESSMENT OF A PORTABLE DEVICE FOR THE QUANTITATIVE MEASUREMENT OF ANKLE JOINT STIFFNESS IN SPASTIC SUBJECTS
140 52 Chinnaya Asari Thiyagarajan ULTRASOUND GUIDED LOCALISATION OF INTRATHECAL PUMP REFILL PORT: A CASE STUDY(United Kingdom)
141 87 Marina Demetrios (Australia) THE EFFECTIVENESS OF OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION FOLLOWING BOTULINUM TOXIN TYPE A (BONT-A)TREATMENT FOR UPPER AND LOWER LIMB SPASTICITY IN PERSONS WITH STROKE.
142 88 Marina Demetrios (Australia) DESCRIBING THE ‘BLACK BOX’ OF REHABILITATION FOLLOWING BOTULINUM TOXIN TYPE A (BONT-A) TREATMENT FOR UPPER AND LOWER LIMB SPASTICITY IN PERSONS WITH STROKE.
143 90 Xianghu Xiong (New Zealand) EXPERIENCE WITH IMMEDIATE EFFECT OF ELECTRICAL NERVE STIMULATION GUIDED BOTULINUM TOXIN TYPE A INJECTION FOR ADULT SPASTICITY
144 134 Natasha Lannin (Australia) DESIGN AND FEASIBILITY OF A RANDOMIZED CLINICAL TRIAL TO EVALUATE THE EFFECT OF INTENSIVE REHABILITATION FOLLOWING BOTULINUM TOXIN INJECTIONS IN NEUROLOGICAL PATIENTS WITH SPASTICITY
145 277 Ettie Ben-Shabat (Australia) INTRA AND INTER RATER RELIABILTIY OF THE TARDIEU SCALE FOR ADULT LOWER LIMB SPASTICITY ASSESSMENT
146 318 Amra Saric (Canada) TREATMENT WITH BOTULINUM TOXIN - IN ISAACS’ SYNDROME
147 385 Brooke Adair (Australia) PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES OF FUNCTIONAL MOBILITY TOOLS IN HEREDITARY SPASTIC PARAPLEGIA AND OTHER CHILDHOOD NEUROLOGICAL CONDITIONS
149 548 Giorgio Maggioni (Italy) APPLICATION OF INERTIAL SENSOR TO PERFORM PENDULUM TEST ON SPASTIC VEGETATIVE STATE PATIENTS: A VALIDATION STUDY
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
203
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
150 561 hilal keklicek (Turkey) INVESTIGATION OF ACUTE EFFECTS OF FOOT MOBILIZATION, DEEP FOOT MASSAGE AND KINESIOTAPING ON GASTROSOLEUS SPASTICITY AND BALANCE: A PILOT STUDY
151 563 Kathy Kuipers (Australia) INDIVIDUALISED ASSESSMENT AND BOTULINUM TOXIN INJECTION AT THE SHOULDER AND HAND FOR ADULTS WITH BRAIN INJURY
152 40 INTAN SABRINA (Australia) THE COSTS OF BOWEL CARE IN SPINAL CORD INJURED PATIENTS - AN EXPERIENCE FROM MALAYSIA
153 68 Peter Banczerowski (Hungary) NEW MINIMAL INVASIVE TECHNIQUES IN THE TREATMENT OF INTRAMEDULLARY PATHOLOGIES TO PREVENT DESTRUCTION AND DEFORMITIES OF THE DORSAL SPINAL STRUCTURES: THE SPLIT LAMINOTOMY AND THE PARASPLIT TECHNIQUE
154 412 Hitoshi MAKINO (Japan) AN FMRI STUDY OF THE MOTOR CORTEX ABOUT A PREDICTION OF A TIMING RELATED TO THE MOVEMENTS OF FINGERS AND TOES IN PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC SPINAL CORD INJURY
155 504 Krongkaew Hanpanich (Thailand) EFFECT OF CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDELINES ON QUALITY OF CARE FOR PATIENT WITH NEUROGENIC BLADDER: ROUTINE TO RESEARCH
156 308 Toshiaki Suzuki (Japan) THE EXCITABILITY OF SPINAL NEURAL FUNCTION DURING SEVERAL MOTOR IMAGERY TASKS ABOUT ISOMETRIC OPPONENS POLLICIS ACTIVITY
157 19 Julie Louie (Australia) PATIENT CENTERED CARE: INCORPORATING THE PATIENT’S PERSPECTIVE IN GOAL SETTING ON THE REHABILITATION UNIT
159 37 Ju-Ying Chang (Taiwan) CHANGES IN ENDPOINT KINEMATICS CHARACTERIZE POST-STROKE RECOVERY AFTER ROBOT-AIDED ARM TRAINING
160 39 Marc Rousseaux (France) BODY REPRESENTATION BIASES OF NEGLECT PATIENTS
161 44 Ryo Momosaki (Japan) SIX-DAY COURSE OF REPETITIVE TRANSCRANIAL MAGNETIC STIMULATION PLUS INTENSIVE SWALLOWING REHABILITATION FOR POST-STROKE DYSPHAGIA : A CASE SERIES STUDY.
162 45 Gisela Wolters Gregório SPOUSES' INCREASED USE OF PASSIVE COPING STYLES AFTER STROKE IS MALADAPTIVE(Netherlands)
163 49 Natalia Rybalko COMBINED APPLICATION OF ROBOT-ASSISTED TRAINING AND FUNCTIONAL ELECTRICAL STIMULATION (Russian Federation) AT THE PATIENTS IN ACUTE STROKE
164 50 Natalia Rybalko ROBOT-ASSISTED LOCOMOTOR TRAINING: THE INFLUENCE ON CENTRAL AND CEREBRAL HEMODYNAMIC(Russian Federation)
166 59 Annabel McNamara (Australia) CONFIDENCE IN DRIVING POST STROKE AND ITS EFFECTS ON DRIVING HABITS
167 61 Oliver Stoller (Switzerland) EXERCISE TESTING EARLY AFTER STROKE USING FEEDBACK - CONTROLLED ROBOTICS-ASSISTED TREADMILL EXERCISE: A PILOT STUDY
168 64 Amra Saric (Canada) TRISMUS IN LOCKED-IN SYNDROME
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
204
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
169 66 Gusti Tautscher-Basnett (Austria) CIAT DURING MULTIDISCIPLINARY IN-PATIENT NEUROREHABILITATION FOR A PATIENT WITH CHRONIC APHASIA
170 73 Toby Cumming (Australia) THE MONTREAL COGNITIVE ASSESSMENT IS VALID IN STROKE BUT SO IS THE MINI-MENTAL STATE EXAMINATION
171 74 Corina Schuster (Switzerland) MOTOR IMAGERY EXPERIENCES AND USE: ASKING PATIENTS AFTER STROKE WHERE, WHEN, WHAT, WHY, AND HOW THEY USE IMAGERY: A QUALITATIVE INVESTIGATION
172 75 Corina Schuster (Switzerland) COMPARISON OF EMBEDDED AND ADDED MOTOR IMAGERY TRAINING IN PATIENTS AFTER STROKE:RESULTS OF A RANDOMISED CONTROLLED PILOT TRIAL
173 77 Piyapat Dajpratham (Thailand) WALKING FUNCTION AT 1 YEAR AFTER STROKE REHABILITATION: A MULTICENTER STUDY
174 82 Imogen Clark (Australia) PATTERNED SENSORY ENHANCEMENT: AN INNOVATIVE NEUROLOGIC MUSIC THERAPY INTERVENTION FOR OLDER ADULTS DURING REHABILITATION
176 86 Gribson Chan (Singapore) STROKE REHABILITATION: BENEFITS OF CARRY OVER PROGRAMME IN SUB ACUTE CARE UNIT
177 93 Kim Brock (Australia) DOES PHYSIOTHERAPY BASED ON THE BOBATH CONCEPT ACHIEVE GREATER IMPROVEMENT IN WALKING ABILITY IN PEOPLE WITH STROKE COMPARED TO STRUCTURED TASK PRACTICE? A PILOT RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL
178 94 Kim Brock (Australia) REHABILITATION FOR SEVERE STROKE IN VICTORIA: IS THERE EQUITY OF ACCESS?
179 95 Birgitta Langhammer (Norway) DISABILITY AFTER STROKE: A PREDICTOR FOR EXERCISE ABILITY IN A LONGITUDINAL PERSPECTIVE?
180 99 Gurpreet Kaur (Australia) HOW PHYSICALLY ACTIVE ARE PEOPLE WITH STROKE IN THERAPY SESSIONS AIMED AT IMPROVING MOTOR FUNCTION? A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW
181 109 Henrik Stig Joergensen (Denmark) TEMPORAL TRENDS IN STROKE AND ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY IN DENMARK, YEARS 2000-2010.
182 110 Henrik Stig Joergensen (Denmark) THE NEED OF HOSPITAL AND COMMUNITY HEALTH CARE SERVICES FOR THE REHABILITATION OF ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY AND STROKE
183 112 Tomokazu Noma (Japan) ANTI-SPASTIC EFFECTS OF THE DIRECT APPLICATION OF VIBRATORY STIMULI TO THE SPASTIC MUSCLES OF HEMIPLEGIC LIMBS IN POST-STROKE PATIENTS: A PROOF-OF-PRINCIPLE STUDY
184 113 Henrik Stig Joergensen (Denmark) A NATIONAL STRATEGY FOR THE REHABILITATION OF PATIENTS WITH ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY AND STROKE IN DENMARK
185 115 Meyke Roosink (Netherlands) SOMATOSENSORY SENSITIZATION IN PERSISTENT SHOULDER PAIN AFTER STROKE: RESULTS OF A PROSPECTIVE FOLLOW-UP STUDY
186 124 Shigeru Sonoda (Japan) DIFFICULTY ORDER OF ACTIVITIES OF DAILY LIVING IN STROKE PATIENTS: AGE DIFFERENCE
187 125 Catherine Dean (Australia) WEIGHT-BEARING EXERCISE IMPROVES MOBILITY IN STROKE SURVIVORS AND MAY PREVENT FALLS IN FASTER WALKERS
188 126 Krisna Piravej (Thailand) EFFECT OF MIRROR THERAPY IN RECOVERING UPPER LIMB STRENGTH & FUNCTION IN CHRONIC STROKE PATIENTS
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
7th World Congress for NeuroRehabilitation
205
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
189 127 Ching-Lin Hsieh (Taiwan) EFFICIENCY AND VALIDITY OF THE COMPUTERIZED ADAPTIVE TESTING OF FUGL-MEYER MOTOR TEST IN PATIENTS WITH STROKE
190 128 Shuji Matsumoto (Japan) CEREBRAL PERFUSION AND COGNITIVE FUNCTION IN POST-STROKE PATIENTS WITH HYPERTENSION
191 129 Shuji Matsumoto (Japan) TRIGEMINAL SOMATOSENSORY EVOKED POTENTIALS IN POST-STROKE PATIENTS
192 135 Marina Parziali (Sweden) ARM FUNCTION WITHIN 72 HOURS AFTER FIRST OCCASION OF STROKE AND STROKE OUTCOME IN AN UNSELECTED POPULATION
193 138 Per-Olof Hansson (Sweden) “FAST-TRACK” OF ACUTE STROKE PATIENTS IS EFFECTIVE AND SAVES TIME !
194 143 Wataru Kakuda (Japan) CLINICAL APPLICATION OF COMBINED 6-HZ PRIMED LOW-FREQUENCY RTMS AND INTENSIVE OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY FOR UPPER LIMB HEMIPARESIS AFTER STROKE
195 145 Jia Eng (Singapore) NEUROREHABILITATION OUTCOMES OF THE EARLY SUPPORTED DISCHARGE (ESD) PROGRAMME FOR STROKE PATIENTS: THE SINGAPORE EXPERIENCE
196 146 Yuichiro Sogawa (Japan) EFFECTIVENESS OF INTRAVENOUS RT-PA THERAPY FOR CEREBRAL INFARCTION BASED ON THE JAPANESE ASSOCIATION OF REHABILITATION MEDICINE PATIENT DATABASE
197 147 Angela Vratsistas (Australia) A CLOSER LOOK AT ARM REHABILITATION AND OUTCOMES AFTER STROKE: A RESEARCH PROTOCOL
198 149 Lina Bunketorp Käll (Sweden) IS IT POSSIBLE TO IMPROVE THE LIFE SITUATION AMONG COMMUNITY-DWELLING INDIVIDUALS IN THE LATE PHASE OF STROKE THROUGH A RHYTHM AND MUSIC METHOD AND THERAPEUTIC RIDING?: STUDY PROTOCOL FOR A THREE-ARMED RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
199 150 Frances Batchelor (Australia) FALLS PREVENTION AFTER STROKE: DOES ADHERENCE TO EXERCISE INFLUENCE FALLS?
200 152 Margit Alt Murphy (Sweden) KINEMATIC ANALYSIS OF UPPER EXTREMITY PERFORMANCE AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO SENSORIMOTOR IMPAIRMENTS AFTER STROKE
201 158 Masachika Niimi (Japan) THERAPEUTIC APPLICATION OF HIGH-FREQUENCY RTMS COMBINED WITH INTENSIVE OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY FOR PEDIATRIC STROKE PATIENTS WITH UPPER LIMB HEMIPARESIS: A CASE SERIES STUDY
202 160 Ann-Marie Hughes ILC MEDIATED FES FOR STROKE ARM REHABILITATION(United Kingdom)
203 164 Tipyarat Saringcarinkul (Thailand) ROBOT-ASSISTED ARM TRAINER IN SUBACUTE STROKE PATIENTS: PILOT-STUDY
204 165 Sarah Morriss (Australia) COMPONENTS OF AN EFFECTIVE EARLY SUPPORTED DISCHARGE TEAM FOR STROKE: A WEST AUSTRALIAN PERSPECTIVE
205 171 Rebecca Fisher (United Kingdom) A QUALITATIVE INVESTIGATION OF STROKE EARLY SUPPORTED DISHCARGE SERVICES: MOVING BEYOND THE EVIDENCE BASE
207 177 Olga Uvarova (Russian Federation) FUNCTIONAL ELECTRICAL STIMULATION IN COMBINATION WITH ROBOTIC MECHANIC IN PATIENTS WITH ACUTE ISCHEMIC STROKE
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
206
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
208 185 Aki Yokoi (Japan) COMBINATION TREATMENT OF rTMS AND INTENSIVE OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY FOR UPPER LIMB HEMIPARESIS: A PILOT STUDY OF 60 POST-STROKE PATIENTS
209 186 Ayumi Tominaga (Japan) CORRELATION BETWEEN BRUNNSTROM RECOVERY STAGE AND WOLF MOTOR FUNCTION TEST/FUGL-MEYERASSESSMENT IN POST-STROKE PATIENTS
210 189 Bernhard Elsner (Germany) TRANSCRANIAL DIRECT CURRENT STIMULATION (TDCS) FOR IMPROVING APHASIA AFTER STROKE: A SYSTEMATIC COCHRANE REVIEW
211 190 Barbara Singer (Australia) THE EFFECT OF AN EMG-ES PROGRAM ± BILATERAL TRAINING PROGRAM ON ARM FUNCTION & IHI AFTER STROKE
212 191 Jan Mehrholz (Germany) ELECTROMECHANICAL-ASSISTED TRAINING FOR WALKING AFTER STROKE: WHAT IS THE EVIDENCE?
214 201 Sebastien Pollet (United Kingdom) CORTICAL ACTIVITY CHANGES AMONG STROKE PATIENTS FOLLOWING ROBOTIC UPPER LIMB REHABILITATIONAS MEASURED BY EEG DURING REACHING MOVEMENTS
215 202 Vandana Vasudevan (Australia) LENGTH OF STAY AND FUNCTIONAL OUTCOMES FOR PATIENTS WITH STROKE ADMITTED TO A REHABILITATION CENTRE FOLLOWING THE INTRODUCTION OF A NEUROREHABILITATION UNIT.
216 205 Bo Ryun Kim (Korea) THE EFFECT OF CARDIAC FUNCTION ON FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY IN SUBACUTE STROKE PATIENTS
217 208 Jane Burridge (United Kingdom) TECHNOLOGIES IN UPPER LIMB REHABILITATION POST-STROKE: THE USERS’ PERSPECTIVE
218 214 Mayowa Owolabi (Nigeria) PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES OF THE HRQOLISP-40: A NOVEL, SHORTENED MULTICULTURALLY VALID HOLISTIC STROKE MEASURE
219 216 Snezana Vasic (Serbia) COLOR DOPPLER ULTRASONOGRAPHY (CDS) IN THE EVALUATION OF EXTRACRANIAL VERTEBRAL ARTERY (VA) IN SUBJECTS WITH VERTEBROBASILAR INSUFFICIENCY (VBI)
220 220 Markus Kofler (Austria) CATS-TEST: NORMATIVE DATA FOR A SCREENING TEST FOR VISUAL NEGLECT
221 221 Kathye Light (United States) CHANGES IN CUTANEOUS SENSATION WITH CONSTRAINT-INDUCED MOVEMENT THERAPY
222 222 Markus Kofler (Austria) VISUAL NEGLECT FOLLOWING FIRST STROKE: LEFT VERSUS RIGHT HEMISPHERICAL LESION
223 224 Sally Speare (Australia) WHAT ARE THE MAIN REASONS FOR EXCLUSION FROM AN EARLY REHABILITATION TRIAL (AVERT)?
224 225 Adriana Conforto (Brazil) REPETITIVE TRANSCRANIAL MAGNETIC STIMULATION EARLY AFTER STROKE: A PILOT & PROOF OF PRINCIPLE STUDY
225 228 Fiona Ellery (Australia) TRIALS THE TRIBULATIONS AND THE TRUTHS: RECRUITING HOSPITALS TO A VERY EARLY REHABILITATION TR (AVERT - INTERNATIONAL)
226 239 Jen-Wen Hung (Taiwan) EFFICACY OF VIDEO-GAME BASED BIOFEEDBACK EXERCISES ON BALANCE FUNCTION IN CHRONIC STROKE SUBJECTS: A PILOT RANDOMIZED CONTROL TRIAL
227 242 HyeJin Moon (South Korea) THE USEFULNESS OF BLADDER RECONDITIONING BEFORE INDWELLING URETHRAL CATHETER REMOVAL IN STROKE PATIENTS
228 250 Kenmei Mizutani (Japan) IDENTIFICATION OF PROTEINS RELATED TO FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY IN THE PERILESIONAL CORTEX OF RATS WITH CEREBRAL INFARCTION
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
207
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
230 259 GI HO Jo (South Korea) THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LANGUAGE FUNCTION & NONLINGUISTIC COGNITION IN POST-STROKE PATIENTS
231 267 Sally Towers (Australia) ELECTRONIC SCREENING FOR DEPRESSION IN STROKE PATIENTS: A QUALITATIVE STUDY OF DOCTOR AND PATIENT PERCEPTIONS FO ACCEPTABILITY
232 268 Natalie Fini (Australia) QUANTITATIVE MEASUREMENT OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AFTER STROKE – ARE WE THERE YET?
233 270 Jennifer White (Australia) EXPLORING POST STROKE CHANGES IN COMMUNITY DWELLING STROKE SURVIVORS: A MIXED METHODS LONGITUDINAL COHORT STUDY
234 271 Jung Ah Lee (South Korea) THE KINEMATICS OF UPPER EXTREMITY MOVEMENT OF STROKE PATIENTS IN DRINKING
235 274 Louise Bannister (Australia) BEHAVIOURAL IMPROVEMENT OF TOUCH SENSATION FROM ONE TO SIX MONTHS POSTSTROKE IS ASSOCIATED WITH RESTING-STATE FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY CHANGES
236 282 Liesbet De Baets (Belgium) REPEATABILITY OF A THREE-DIMENSIONAL SCAPULAR MOVEMENT ANALYSIS IN PERSONS AFTER STROKE
237 283 Annick Timmermans (Netherlands) COMPUTERIZED AIMING TASK TO ASSESS THE SENSORIMOTOR IMPAIRMENT LEVEL IN CHRONIC STROKE
239 289 Annick Timmermans (Netherlands) ARM ACCELEROMETRY IN STROKE: RELATION WITH FUNCTION, ACTIVITY, AND FUNCTIONAL QUALITY OF LIFE
240 290 Annick Timmermans (Netherlands) TRANSFER OF MOTOR LEARNING IN (ROBOTIC) TASK-ORIENTED ARM-HAND TRAINING AFTER STROKE
242 296 Håkon Hofstad (Norway) ESD STROKE BERGEN: AN RCT COMPARING TWO DIFFERENT SCHEMES OF EARLY SUPPORTED DISCHARGEAFTER STROKE WITH ORDINARY TREATMENT: RESULTS FROM 3 MONTHS FOLLOW-UP
243 298 Hsiu-I Chen (Taiwan) PREDICTING LOWER EXTREMITY MOTOR FUNCTION IN PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC STROKE USING STRUCTURALINTEGRITY OF CORTICOSPINAL TRACT AND LATERALIZATION OF SENSORIMOTOR CORTEX ACTIVATION
244 303 Keh-chung Lin (Taiwan) A COMPARATIVE EFFICACY TRIAL OF UNILATERAL VERSUS BILATERAL ROBOT-ASSISTED ARM TRAINING FOR IMPROVING MOTOR AND DAILY FUNCTIONS IN PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC STROKE
245 309 Jane Burridge (United Kingdom) DEVELOPMENT OF A WEB-SUPPORTED PROGRAMME OF CONSTRAINT INDUCED THERAPY FOLLOWING STROKE (LIFECIT)
246 311 Anna Danielsson (Sweden) PHYSICAL ACTIVITY AND WALKING SPEED AFTER STROKE COMPARED TO CONTROL VALUES
247 319 Lisa Simpson (Canada) THE RESPONSIVENESS OF FUNCTIONAL OUTCOME MEASURES FOR THE UPPER EXTREMITY FOLLOWINGSTROKE: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW
248 321 Barathi Sreenivasan (Canada) INPATIENT STROKE EDUCATION IN A REHABILITATION HOSPITAL: PATIENT EVALUATION
249 323 Cooky Wong (Australia) ATTENDING A STROKE GROUP CAN IMPROVE WALKING PERFORMANCE OF CHRONIC STROKE PATIENTS
250 325 Monica Skarin (New Zealand) PHYSICAL ACTIVITY IN STROKE REHABILITATION - A BEHAVIOURAL MAPPING STUDY
251 326 Marleen Schönherr (Netherlands) HOW TO ENHANCE APPLICATION OF AVAILABLE EVIDENCE TO LOCAL PRACTICES? STROKE REHABILITATION AS AN ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLE
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
208
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
252 328 Ruth Turk (United Kingdom) MOTOR IMPAIRMENTS ASSOCIATED WITH LOSS OF UPPER LIMB FUNCTIONAL ACTIVITY EARLY & LATE POST-STROKE
253 396 Thais Roderigues (Brazil) GUIDELINES: REHABILITATION IN ACUTE STROKE
254 340 Annick Timmermans (Netherlands) EFFECTIVENESS OF HAPTIC MASTER SUPPORTED TASK-ORIENTED ARM TRAINING IN CHRONIC STROKE PATIENTS
255 350 Michael Borich (Canada) TRANSCALLOSAL WHITE MATTER TRACT INTEGRITY IS REDUCED FOLLOWING ISCHEMIC STROKE AND PREDICTIVE OF MOTOR FUNCTION IN THE CHRONIC PHASE OF RECOVERY
256 352 Karen Borschmann (Australia) BODY COMPOSITION AND METABOLIC CHANGES BETWEEN TWO WEEKS AND SIX MONTHS OF STROKE
258 359 Robert Mehan (Australia) A PRELIMINARY STUDY INTO THE USE OF ANKLE FOOT ORTHOSIS IN THE EARLY STAGES OF STROKE RECOVERY
259 361 Ada Tang (Canada) MAXIMAL EXERCISE TESTING AFTER STROKE
260 364 Annie McCluskey (Australia) LOW COMPLIANCE WITH NATIONAL STROKE GUIDELINES: FEW PHYSIOTHERAPY OR OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY SESSIONS OCCUR OUTDOORS IN PUBLIC STREETS
261 372 Christine Shiner (Australia) ACTIVE-PASSIVE BILATERAL THERAPY (APBT) AS A BRAIN-PRIMING STRATEGY FOR WII-BASED MOVEMENTTHERAPY AFTER STROKE
262 374 Terry Trinh (Australia) POST-STROKE CARDIOVASCULAR FITNESS IS IMPROVED BY WII-BASED MOVEMENT THERAPY
263 376 Angelica Thompson-Butel ASSESSMENT TOOLS TO MEASURE THE EFFICACY OF WII-BASED MOVEMENT THERAPY FOR (Australia) HIGH- AND LOW-FUNCTIONING PATIENTS
264 380 Vijayakumar K (India) COMPARISON OF TRUNK TRAINING ON UNSTABLE SURFACE VERSUS STABLE SURFACE IN TRUNK CONTROL AND BALANCE FOLLOWING ACUTE STROKE: A PILOT RANDOMIZED CLINICAL TRIAL.
265 392 Chris Graven (Australia) DOES A FOCUS ON PARTICIPATION AND PERSONAL GOAL ACHIEVEMENT HAVE AN IMPACT ON DEPRESSION IN THE FIRST YEAR AFTER STROKE?
266 394 Louise Gustafsson (Australia) STROKE REHABILITATION ENHANCING AND GUIDING TRANSITION HOME
267 399 Julie Bernhardt (Australia) REHABILITATION TRIALS WITHIN THE VIRTUAL INTERNATIONAL STROKE TRIALS ARCHIVE (VISTA-REHAB)
268 400 Kylie Radford (Australia) COMPARING THE EFFECTIVENESS OF GROUP-BASED MEMORY TRAINING AND PREDICTORS OF OUTCOME FOR PATIENTS WITH STROKE VERSUS EPILEPSY
269 405 Louise Jordan (Australia) CONTINENCE CARE FOLLOWING STROKE: WHAT DOES IT TAKE?
270 408 Peih Ling Tsaih (Taiwan) EMG BIOFEEDBACK FOR MOTOR RECOVERY OF LOWER LIMB AFTER STROKE: A META-ANALYSIS
271 409 Pattra Wattanapan (Thailand) FACTOR RELATED STROKE KNOWLEDGE AMONG THAI RURAL POPULATION
272 414 Chris Graven (Australia) DEVELOPMENT OF A CHRONIC STROKE RESOURCE KIT - PUTTING EVIDENCE INTO PRACTICE
273 419 Ben Turner (Australia) A NEW APPROACH TO COMMUNITY REHABILITATION FOLLOWING ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY: SUPPORTING THE GROWTH OF THE PEER-PROFESSIONAL WORKFORCE OF THE STEPS PROGRAM
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
209
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
274 421 Sam-Gyu Lee (South Korea) THE CHARACTERISTICS OF QUANTITATIVE SENSORY ASSESSEMNT OF UPPER LIMBS IN SUBACUTE STROKE PATIENTS
275 422 Hanne Pallesen (Denmark) DISABILITY, IDENTITY AND LIFE CHANGE: A QUALITATIVE FIVE-YEAR FOLLOW-UP STUDY OF STROKE
276 423 Tamara Tse (Australia) START-PREPARE: PREDICTION AND PREVENTION TO ACHIEVE OPTIMAL RECOVERY ENDPOINTS AFTER STROKE
277 424 Sam-Gyu Lee (South Korea) THE CLINICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF POST-STROKE PNEUMONIA IN STROKE REHABILITATION WARD
278 430 Sam-Gyu Lee (South Korea) THE EFFECT OF REGULAR EXERCISE PROGRAM ON COGNITIVE FUNCTION IN CEREBRAL INFARCTION RAT MODEL
279 432 Cally Richardson (Australia) THE EVOLUTION OF SELF-AWARENESS AFTER TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY: BIOPSYCHOSOCIAL PREDICTORS OF DEFICITS AND CHANGE IN AWARENESS
280 447 Alexandra Hall (Australia) A MIXED METHODS STUDY OF THE EXPERIENCE OF TRANSITION TO THE COMMUNITY FOLLOWING NON-TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
281 448 Sharon Hakkennes (Australia) SELECTION FOR INPATIENT REHABILITATION FOLLOWING SEVERE STROKE: AN OBSERVATIONAL STUDY
282 452 Won Hyuk Chang (South Korea) WHITE MATTER HYPERINTENSITIES AND COGNITIVE DYSFUNCTION IN PATIENTS WITH INFRATENTORIAL STROKE
284 471 Kristylee Sharp (Australia) DEVELOPING SELF-AWARENESS THROUGH GROUP EDUCATION FOR CLIENTS WITH ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY
285 487 Danielle Sansonetti (Australia) FACTORS SHAPING THE CONCEPT OF RECOVERY POST-STROKE: SURVIVOR AND CARER PERSPECTIVES
286 488 Danielle Sansonetti (Australia) THE INFLUENCE OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTEXT ON ADL PERFORMANCE OF INDIVIDUALS WITH COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT POST STROKE
287 491 wenwen zhang (Australia) THE EMERGENCE OF STROKE REHABILITATION IN CHINA: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW, 5840 PATIENTS, POSITIVE EFFECT BUT QUESTIONABLE QUALITY
288 499 Susanne Palmcrantz (Sweden) AGE-RELATED DIFFERENCES IN PERCEIVED RECOVERY, DISABILITY AND USE OF HEALTH-CARE DURING THE 1ST YEAR AFTER STROKE
289 501 Thomas Lindén (Sweden) SEDENTARY BEHAVIOUR AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY WITHIN STROKE REHABILITATION
290 503 Christina Brogårdh (Sweden) NO SPECIFIC EFFECT OF WHOLE-BODY VIBRATION TRAINING IN CHRONIC STROKE: A DOUBLE-BLIND RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED STUDY
291 512 (Korea) FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY AFTER ISCHEMIC STROKE WAS ASSOCIATED WITH REDUCED GABAERGIC INHIBITION IN THE INFARCT AREA: A GABA PET STUDY
292 516 Åsa Nordin (Sweden) INTRA- AND INTER-RATER RELIABILITY OF THE ACTION RESEARCH ARM TEST IN PATIENTS WITH STROKE
293 519 Patrik Säterö (Sweden) MODULATION OF CORTICAL EXCITABILITY WITH BILATERAL NAVIGATED REPETITIVE TRANSCRANIAL MAGNETIC STIMULATION (rTMS) IN CHRONIC STROKE: A PILOT STUDY
294 532 Masahiko Sumitani (Japan) DEVELOPMENT OF THE NOVEL ROBOTIC-NEUROREHABILITATION-SUIT-SYSTEM FOR NEUROPATHIC PAIN, SOMATOSENSORY-DEFICIT AND MOTOR-PARALYSIS, ACCOMPANIED WITH LESION OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEMS
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
210
295 534 Kristylee Sharp (Australia) THE DEVELOPMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION OF STANDARDISED OUTCOME MEASURES FOR AN ACQUIREDBRAIN INJURY (ABI) REHABILITATION SERVICE
296 537 Michiel van Nunen (Netherlands) RCT EVALUATING THE EFFECTIVENESS OF ROBOT-ASSISTED TREADMILL TRAINING IN RESTORING WALKINGABILITY OF STROKE PATIENTS
297 538 Michiel van Nunen (Netherlands) EFFECTIVENESS OF ROBOT-ASSISTED TREADMILL TRAINING IN STRENGTHENING OF THE LEG MUSCLES OFSTROKE PATIENTS: RESULTS OF AN RCT
298 539 Gülçin Kaymak Karata (Turkey) EFFECT OF NEGLECT ON AMBULATION IN LEFT HEMIPLEGIC PATIENTS
299 540 Joost van Kordelaar (Netherlands) ASSESSING LONGITUDINAL CHANGE IN COORDINATION OF THE PARETIC UPPER LIMB USING ON-SITE 3D-KINEMATIC MEASUREMENTS: A CASE REPORT
300 541 Gülçin Kaymak Karata (Turkey) WII-BASED BALANCE REHABILITATION IS EFFECTIVE IN STROKE: A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED STUDY
301 553 Douglas Gentleman HAS THE INTRODUCTION OF ENDOVASCULAR COILING AFFECTED THE INPATIENT REHABILITATION (United Kingdom) WORKLOAD AFTER ANEURYSMAL SUBARACHNOID HAEMORRHAGE?
302 559 Douglas Gentleman SOMATISATION DISORDER CAUSING INAPPROPRIATE ADMISSION TO AN INPATIENT (United Kingdom) NEUROREHABILITATION PROGRAMME
303 562 Han Young Jung (Korea) RESPONSIBLE MUSCLE(S) TO PREVENT HEMIPLEGIC SHOULDER SUBLUXATION
304 570 Claire Donnellan (Ireland) MAPPING PATIENTS’ EXPERIENCES AFTER STROKE ONTO A PATIENT-FOCUSED INTERVENTION FRAMEWORK
305 573 Abigail Doxford (United Kingdom) A CASE STUDY EXPLORING MIRROR BOX THERAPY, ON MOTOR RECOVERY OF THE UPPER LIMB, IN A PATIENT WITH AN ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY
306 574 Vijayakumar K (India) MENTAL PRACTICE WITH MOTOR IMAGERY ON FUNCTIONAL MOBILITY IN CHRONIC STROKE: A PILOT RANDOMIZED CLINICAL TRIAL
307 575 Vincy Chan (Canada) OLDER ADULTS WITH ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY: FUNCTIONAL INDEPENDENCE MEASURES AFTER INPATIENT REHABILITATION
308 576 Hanneke van Duijnhoven A PILOT STUDY ON THE FEASIBILITY AND EFFECTIVENESS OF THE ADAPTED ‘NIJMEGEN FALLS PREVENTION(Netherlands) PROGRAM’ FOR PEOPLE WITH STROKE
309 577 Anita Heeren (Netherlands) C-MILL THERAPY IMPROVES GAIT ADAPTABILITY IN THE CHRONIC PHASE AFTER STROKE
310 578 Hanneke van Duijnhoven ARE PEOPLE WITH STROKE MORE UNSTABLE IN BACKWARD THAN LATERAL DIRECTION AFTER BALANCE (Netherlands) PERTURBATIONS?
311 580 Claire Donnellan (Ireland) IMPLEMENTING CLINICAL GUIDELINES IN STROKE: A QUALITATIVE STUDY OF PERCEIVED FACILITATORS & BARRIERS
312 588 Ann Björkdahl (Sweden) HOW TO ASSESS FITNESS TO DRIVE AFTER A STROKE
313 590 Dominic Perennou (France) WHEN MIGHT A CANE BE NECESSARY FOR WALKING FOLLOWING A STROKE?
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
211
314 596 Dominic Pereennou (France) NEURAL BASES FOR THE PERCEPTION OF THE VISUAL VERTICAL AFTER STROKE
315 599 Engin Cakar (Turkey) THE FUNCTIONAL EFFECTS OF RTMS AND HOME EXERCISE PROGRAM COMBINATION ON A SEVERELYDISABLED CHRONIC POST-STROKE PATIENT: A CASE STUDY
316 606 Peter Grieshofer (Austria) PREDICTING FUNCTIONAL STROKE-REHABILITATION OUTCOME BY MEANS OF BRAIN-COMPUTER INTERFACE TECHNOLOGY: THE BCI4REHAB PROJECT
317 587 Michael O'Dell (United States) THE ORDER EFFECT OF ROBOTIC TRAINING FOR PROXIMAL AND DISTAL UPPER EXTREMITY MUSCLES FOLLOWING STROKE
319 611 Peter Grieshofer (Austria) ROBOTIC DEVICE ( AMADEO )IN HAND REHABILITATION AFTER STROKE A NEW OPPORTUNITY TO IMPROVETHE FUNCTIONAL OUTCOME? PRELIMINARY FUNCTIONAL AND FMRI RESULTS WITH 11 PATIENTS
320 627 Sarah Rewell (Australia) A 6 MONTH STUDY OF BEHAVIOURAL DEFICIT AFTER STROKE IN RATS
321 635 Katie Wadden (Canada) CORTICAL ACTIVATION GUIDED QUANTITATIVE WHITE MATTER TRACTOGRAPHY IN INDIVIDUALS WITH STROKE
322 32 Colleen Butler (Canada) LIVING THE AFTERMATH OF A TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY (TBI)
323 33 Anupam Gupta (India) FUNCTIONAL OUTCOME OF REHABILITATION IN CHRONIC SEVERE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY PATIENTS: A PROSPECTIVE STUDY
324 47 Suzanne Barker-Collo EXAMINING THE INCIDENCE OF TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN NEW ZEALAND, THE BIONIC STUDY (2009-2012)(New Zealand)
325 69 Hinemoa Hinemoa Elder INDIGENOUS CHILD AND ADOLESCENT TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY (TBI) REHABILITATION: A MAORI(New Zealand) THEORY AND FRAMEWORK
326 89 Sharidan Shimmin (Australia) CHANGING ROUTINE AND ENVIRONMENT CAN CREATE A POSITIVE CHANGE FOR PEOPLE WITH ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY
327 122 Michael Pforr (Australia) CHARACTERISTICS OF A 5 YEAR COHORT DISCHARGED FROM A COMMUNITY BASED BRAIN INJURY REHABILITATION PROGRAM IN PERTH, WESTERN AUSTRALIA
328 130 Kylie Hull (Australia) DEVELOPING INDEPENDENCE AND EMPOWERMENT THROUGH MEDICATION SELF MANAGEMENT AMONGST PERSONS WITH ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY
330 175 Alexey Kuznetsov COMPONENTS OF NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL REHABILITATION OF PATIENTS WITH BRAIN INJURIES(Russian Federation)
331 178 Mathilde Chevignard (France) LANGUAGE OUTCOMES AND SCHOOLING AFTER MODERATE-TO-SEVERE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY SUSTAINED BEFORE THE AGE OF 18 MONTHS
332 179 Elizabeth Tischler (Australia) GETTING PEOPLE BACK TO WORK: ASSESSMENTS AND INTERVENTIONS USED IN AN INTERDISCIPLINARY RETURN TO WORK AND STUDY PROGRAM
335 226 Regina Schultz (Australia) RECOVERY PATTERNS IN COGNITIVE DOMAINS AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES FOLLOWING SEVERETRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
212
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
336 227 Stefanie Cridge (New Zealand) IDENTIFYING AND MANAGING CLINICAL RISKS IN THE TBI POPULATION
337 229 Cassandra Budden (Australia) EVALUATION OF A MULTIDISCIPLINARY EARLY INTERVENTION GROUP FOR PATIENTS IN MINIMALLY CONSCIOUS STATES
338 230 Natasha Lannin (Australia) THE REAL COST OF 24-HOUR CARE FOR CATASTROPHICALLY INJURED ADULTS IN NEW SOUTH WALES, AUSTRALIA
339 246 Anna Tölli (Sweden) PITUITARY INSUFFICIENCIES AFTER MODERATE-SEVERE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY (TBI) OR SUBARACHNOIDHAEMORRHAGE (SAH): OCCURRENCE AND IMPACT?
340 248 Ruth Foulkes (Australia) CREATIVE & COLLABORATIVE INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACH TO SLOW STREAM REHABILITATION FOLLOWING ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY
341 288 Leanne Hassett (Australia) THE MEASUREMENT OF PHYSICAL INACTIVITY AND REDUCED CARDIORESPIRATORY FITNESS IN ADULTS WITH TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY (TBI)
342 317 Ekaterina Fufaeva RECOVERY PATTERNS OF EXECUTIVE DYSFUNCTION AFTER SEVERE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY IN CHILDREN(Russian Federation)
343 324 Jaewon Beom (South Korea) EFFECT OF ELECTRICAL STIMULATION OF THE SUPRAHYOID MUSCLES IN BRAIN-INJURED PATIENTS WITH DYSPHAGIA
344 329 Alice Theadom (New Zealand) ENZOGENOL SUPPLEMENTATION FOR IMPROVING COGNITIVE FUNCTION POST-TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY: A PILOT STUDY
345 344 Amanda Francis (Australia) TRANSITIONING TO ADULTHOOD: NEEDS OF YOUNG PEOPLE WITH AN ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY AND THOSE OF THEIR FAMILIES
346 354 Lisa Gill (Australia) DEVELOPMENT OF THE MODEL OF CARE FOR A NEW ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY REHABILITATION SERVICE
347 355 Alice Pebay (Australia) ANTI-LYSOPHOSPHATIDIC ACID ANTIBODIES IMPROVE OUTCOMES OF NEUROTRAUMA
348 363 Fazah Hanapiah (Malaysia) POSTTRAUMATIC AMNESIA IN ACUTE CARE
349 381 Sosuke Seki (Japan) WHY DOES HER RT. SHOULDER ELEVATE ASSOCIATING WITH SWALLOWING AFTER TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY AND ATLANTOAXIAL SUBLUXATION? : A CASE REPORT
350 410 Audrey McKinlay (Australia) PUBLIC UNDERSTANDING OF MILD TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
351 418 Rachel Briggs (Australia) POST-TRAUMATIC AMNESIA IN CHILDREN: NATURAL HISTORY OF RECOVERY
352 439 Jayanthini Ganeshkumar ROUTINE SCREENING FOR HYPOPITUITARISM FOLLOWING SEVERE TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY: (Australia) IS THIS ESSENTIAL?
354 455 Hyuk Sunwoo (South Korea) HIPPOTHERAPY IN ADULT PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC BRAIN INJURY
355 460 Ingerid Kleffelgard (Norway) MEASUREMENT PROPERTIES OF THE HIGH-LEVEL MOBILITY ASSESSMENT TOOL FOR TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
356 461 Matilde Leonardi (Italy) FUNCTIONING AND DISABILITY IN PATIENTS IN VEGETATIVE STATE AND IN MINIMALLY CONSCIOUS STATE:RESULTS FROM A NATIONAL STUDY
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
213
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
357 469 Allison Foster (New Zealand) OUTCOMES FROM AN EMERGING CONSCIOUSNESS PROGRAMME IN NEW ZEALAND
358 470 Matilde Leonardi (Italy) FUNCTIONING AND DISABILITY OF CHILDREN AND YOUTH WITH DISORDERS OF CONSCIOUSNESS.
359 483 Melissa Nott (Australia) ASSESSING COGNITIVE STRATEGY USE IN ADULTS WITH BRAIN INJURY DURING EVERYDAY FUNCTIONAL TASKS
360 486 Matilde Leonardi (Italy) COGNITIVE FUNCTIONING AND DISABILITY OUTCOMES OF CHILDREN IN VEGETATIVE STATE AND MINIMALLY CONSCIOUS STATE
361 489 Danielle Sansonetti (Australia) EVALUATING COGNITIVE ASSESSMENT: THE CLINICAL REASONING AROUND COGNITIVE ASSESSMENT FOR INDIVIDUALS POST STROKE AND TBI
362 492 Gelu Onose (Romania) OUR EXPERIENCE CONCERNING NEUROREHABILITATIVE OUTCOMES IN PATIENTS WITH POSTACUTE TBITREATED WITH CEREBROLYSIN®
363 493 Matthew HJ Frith (Australia) ASSESSMENT OF DISCOURSE AFTER TBI: INTERNATIONAL SPEECH PATHOLOGY PRACTICE
364 511 Ana Luisa Moretto (Brazil) EVALUATING THE QUALITY OF LIFE IN ADOLESCENTS WITH TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
365 517 Christian Oldenburg (Sweden) NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL OUTCOME FOR SYMPTOMATIC AND NON-SYMPTOMATIC PATIENTS FOLLOWING A MILD TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
366 554 Giorgio Maggioni (Italy) SLEEP AND VEGETATIVE STATE (VS): A DESCRIPTIVE POLYSOMNOGRAPHIC STUDY
367 555 Douglas Gentleman THE EFFECT OF PREVIOUS FRONTAL LOBE DAMAGE ON REHABILITATION AFTER A SUBSEQUENT ACQUIRED(United Kingdom) BRAIN INJURY (ABI)
368 557 Douglas Gentleman RISK FACTORS FOR DISCHARGE FROM INPATIENT REHABILITATION TO INSTITUTIONAL CARE IN (United Kingdom) YOUNGER ADULTS WITH ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY (ABI)
369 560 Mazlina Mazlan (Malaysia) PREDICTORS OF DISCHARGE TO HOME FROM BRAIN INJURY ACUTE CARE IN MALAYSIA
370 569 Meeli Mumma (Estonia) ICF BRIEF SCORE SET FOR TBI PATIENTS
371 583 Vesile Sepici (Turkey) ACUPUNCTURE FOR HYPERSALIVATION IN TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY: A CASE REPORT
372 589 Jerry Larsson (Sweden) FACTORS AFFECTING PARTICIPATION AFTER BRAIN INJURY
373 595 Rajakumari Krishna (India) SILENT EPIDEMIC: THE EFFECTS OF NEUROFEEDBACK TRAINING ON POST CONCUSSION SYMPTOMS AND QUALITY OF LIFE
374 626 Melaku Bogale (United States) GAIT VARIABILITY STUDY USING DUAL TASK PARADIGM AMONGST HEALTHY AND MILD TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY SUBJECTS
375 258 Rikke Guldager (Denmark) VALIDATION OF A PAIN ASSESSMENT SCALE FOR PATIENTS WITH DISORDERS OF CONSCIOUSNESS
376 36 Ju-Ying Chang (Taiwan) CHANGES IN ENDPOINT KINEMATICS CHARACTERIZE POST-STROKE RECOVERY AFTER ROBOT-AIDED ARM TRAINING
214
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
377 640 Michael Selzer (United States) DOES NDEL1 PROMOTE AXON REGENERATION?
378 53 HIROYASU IWATSUKI (Japan) INFLUENCE OF NECK AND TRUNK MUSCLES DURING UNSTABLE SITTING AFTER WHOLE-BODY VIBRATION IN A SQUATTING POSITION
379 80 Frances Simmonds (Australia) USING AN EXTENDED AROC DATASET TO BENCHMARK REHABILITATION OUTCOMES IN THE TREATMENT OF BRAIN INJURY
380 142 Ester Mebalds (Australia) GETTING PEOPLE BACK TO WORK: OCCUPATIONAL OUTCOMES OF AN INTERDISCIPLINARY RETURN TO WORK AND STUDY PROGRAM
381 161 Michael O'Dell (United States) FUNCTIONAL AMBULATION: STANDARD TREATMENT VERSUS ELECTRICAL STIMULATION THERAPY (FASTEST) TRIAL: EARLY DATA
382 166 Inga-Lill Boman (Sweden) SUPPORT IN EVERYDAY ACTIVITIES WITH SMART HOME TECHNOLOGY FOR PERSONS WITH COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENTS
384 184 Yasmine Loupis (Australia) THE MID-TERM ADVICE AND REPORT THERAPY (SMART CARD) PROJECT: A RANDOMISED CONTROL TRIAL AT THE SACRED HEART REHABILITATION SERVICE
385 197 Mikio Muraoka (Japan) CHARACTERISTICS OF PREMOTOR POTENTIAL DETECTED PRIOR TO THE SECOND LUMBRICAL COMPOUNDMUSCLE ACTION POTENTIAL IN NERVE CONDUCTION STUDIES FOR CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME
386 207 Marleen Schonherr (Netherlands) SOCIAL COGNITION AND THE AWARENESS OF SOCIAL INFERENCES TEST (TASIT), DUTCH TRANSLATION
387 217 Jan Lexell (Sweden) SELF-PERCEIVED DISABILITY IN PERSONS WITH POST-POLIO SYNDROME FOLLOWING INTERDISCIPLINARY REHABILITATION
388 234 San San Tay (Singapore) THE PREVALENCE AND AWARENESS OF FATIGUE IN A MULTI-ETHNIC ASIAN POPULATION OF DISABLED ADULTS
389 235 Tomofumi Yamaguchi (Japan) EFFECTS OF TRANSCRANIAL DIRECT CURRENT STIMULATION COMBINED WITH PATTERNED AFFERENT ELECTRICAL STIMULATION ON THE PLASTICITY OF SPINAL INTERNEURONS IN HEALTHY PERSONS
390 243 Daniel Clohesy (Australia) IREHAB: THE USE OF PDA'S AND IDEVICES IN COMMUNITY BASED REHABILITATION
391 255 Kikuo Ota (Japan) INFLUENCE OF NOISE STIMULATION ON GATB TASK PERFORMANCE: A PILOT STUDY
392 295 Susan Petrie (United Kingdom) A STRATEGY TO IMPROVE PROSPECTIVE MEMORY PERFORMANCE: 'GOOGLE CALENDAR'
393 642 Michael Selzer (United States) RETROGRADE CELL DEATH AFTER SPINAL CORD INJURY IS BY THE EXTRINSIC APOPTOTIC PATHWAY
394 643 Michael Selzer (United States) ROLE OF CHONDROITIN SULFATE PROTEOGLYCANS IN SPINAL CORD REGENERATION
395 341 Alice Theadom (New Zealand) DAYTIME NAPPING BEHAVIOUR AND THE SYMPTOM EXPERIENCE IN PEOPLE WITH FIBROMYALGIA SYNDROME
215
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
396 382 Hannah Barden (Australia) MEASURING HAND PERFORMANCE FOLLOWING BOTULINUM TOXIN-A INJECTIONS: A NOVEL COMPUTERISED APPROACH
397 390 Shea Morrison (Australia) REHABILITATION OF AFRICAN TRYPANOSOMIASIS MENINGOENCEPHALITIS
398 406 Toru Inada (Japan) THE EFFECT OF KINESTHETIC ILLUSION INDUCED BY A MOVIE ON THE CHANGE OF MUSCULAR OUTPUTFUNCTION AFTER SHORT-TERM IMMOBILIZATION
399 407 Ya-Ting Hsu (Taiwan) DEFICITS IN SENSORY ORGANIZATION FOR POSTURAL CONTROL IN CHILDREN WITH TOURETTE SYNDROME: A PRELIMINARY STUDY
400 416 Shea Morrison (Australia) REHABILITATION MANAGEMENT OF LYME NEUROBORRELIOSIS: A CASE REPORT
401 443 Yoko Inamoto (Japan) THE EFFECTS OF SWALLOWING MANEUVERS ON THE SWALLOWING DYNAMICS ANALYZED BY COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY
402 456 Annemie Spooren (Belgium) ARM HAND SKILL TRAINING PREFERENCES IN CENTRAL NEUROLOGICAL PATHOLOGIES
403 468 Zhiming Tang (Japan) EFFECT OF OBSERVING ERROR MODEL ON IMITATION MOTOR LEARNING
404 476 Wei-Jing I (Taiwan) SENSORY PROCESSING IN CHILDREN WITH TOURETTE SYNDROME
406 480 Fayaz khan (India) THETA BURST STIMULATION (TBS) AND FUNCTIONAL ELECTRICAL STIMULATION (FES) IN POST-STROKE MOTOR REHABILITATION : A RANDOMISED CONTROL TRIAL.
407 485 Wai-keong Ho (Taiwan) PERFORMANCE MEASURES AS PREDICTORS OF FRAILTY IN OLDER PEOPLE
408 521 Patrik Säterö (Sweden) ON REPETITIVE TRANSCRANIAL MAGNETIC STIMULATION (RTMS) AND DIVIDED ATTENTION IN HEALTHY SUBJECTS
409 533 Pei-Jung Wang (Taiwan) OBSERVATIONAL ASSESSMENTS AND MATERNAL REPORTS OF MASTERY MOTIVATION IN TODDLERS WITH MOTOR DELAY
410 564 Gerry Roxburgh (United Kingdom) ETHICAL DYSPHAGIA MANAGEMENT: TREATING THE UNTREATABLE
411 567 David Krabbe (Sweden) COGNITIVE FUNCTION IN PATIENTS WITH BURNOUT
412 592 Senthil Paramasivam Kumar EFFECTIVENESS OF GRADED MOTOR IMAGERY AND MIRROR THERAPY IN PATIENTS WITH UNILATERAL UPPER(India) EXTREMITY COMPLEX REGIONAL PAIN SYNDROME TYPE-1: A PILOT QUASI-EXPERIMENTAL STUDY
413 602 Vesile Sepici (Turkey) SHORT TERM REHABILITATION OUTCOMES OF PATIENTS WITH RASMUSSEN ENCEPHALITIS AFTER HEMISPHEROTOMY
414 605 Toshiyuki Fujiwara (Japan) HYBRID ASSISTIVE NEUROMUSCULAR DYNAMIC STIMULATION (HANDS) THERAPY IMPROVED UPPER EXTREMITYMOTOR FUNCTION AND MODULATED THE INTRACORTICAL INHIBITION AND SPINAL RECIPROCAL INHIBITION
216
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
Abstract ID
Poster No.
Author & Country Abstract title
416 637 Humberto Cerrel Bazo (Italy) WHY DOES ELECTRICALLY-INDUCED MUSCLE CONTRACTIONS MAY FACILITATE CHRONIC PARAPLEGICS SUBJECTS TO MEET THE BODY DEMAND WHEN WALKING AT A CONSTANT SPEED DURING A PROLONG GAIT CONDITION?
417 638 Humberto Cerrel Bazo (Italy) PROLONG WALKING DURING AN ELECTRICALLY OR MECHANICALLY INDUCED WALKING CONDITION IN GAIT TRAINED CHRONIC PARAPLEGICS CAN BE JEOPARDIZING TO HEALTH?
418 639 Humberto Cerrel Bazo (Italy) IT’S POSSIBLE FOR CHRONIC PARAPLEGICS SUBJECTS TO MEET THE BODY DEMAND DURING AN ELECTRICALLY OR MECHANICALLY INDUCE SUBMAXIMAL WALKING EFFORT?
419 203 Sheila Lennon (Australia) GROUP CIRCUIT TRAINING FOR BALANCE AND MOBILITY IN PEOPLE WITH MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS: THE PARTICIPANTS’ PERSPECTIVE
420 215 Sheila Lennon (Australia) BRIDGES: SELF-MANAGEMENT FOR STROKE SURVIVORS IN THE COMMUNITY: A FEASIBILITY RANDOMISEDCONTROLLED TRIAL.
421 4 YONG KYUN Kim (South Korea) THE EFFECT OF WEIGHT BEARING TRAINING THROUGH THE BIO-FEED BACK PROGRAM (SMART STEP®) ON THE WALKING ABILITY IN STROKE PATIENTS
423 Marieke McPhail (Australia) NORTHCOTT PAEDIATRIC SPINAL CORD INJURIES LIVING SKILLS CHART