The aim of the present study was to quantify the effect of multisensory rehabilitation on rats’ cognition after an experimental brain trauma and to assess its possible clinical implications. The complex intermittent multisensory rehabilitation consisted of currently used major therapeutic procedures targeted at the improvement of cognitive functions; including multisensory and motor stimulation and enriched environment. We have confirmed this positive effect of early multisensory rehabilitation on the recovery of motor functions after traumatic brain injury. However, we have been able to prove a positive effect on the recovery of cognitive functions only with respect to the frequency of efficient search st rategies in a Barnes maze test, while results for search time and travelled distance were not significantly different between st udy groups. We have concluded that the positive effects of an early treatment of functional deficits are comparable with the clinical results in early neurorehabilitation in human patients after brain trauma. It might therefore be reasonable to apply these experimental results to human medical neurorehabilitation care., M. Lippert-Grüner ... [et al.]., and Obsahuje bibliografii a bibliografické odkazy
Pompe Community -- AMDA – Acid Maltase Deficiency Association -- United Pompe Foundation -- Pompe Pages (Association for Glycogen Storage Disease UK) -- Pompeho centrum při Erasmově lékařském centru v Rotterdamu -- Správná diagnóza.cz and Stanislav Voháňka
Informace o mozkomíšním moku na serveru UpToDate(Wolters Kluwer) -- Multimediální učebnice 3. LF UK: Likvor, hematoencefalická a hematolikvorová bariéra//Cerebrospinal Fluid, Blood-Brain Barrier and Blood-CSF Barrier -- Cerebrospinal Fluid Analysis na stránkách American Family Physician -- Neuropathology Web (Northeast Ohio Medical University) and Stanislav Voháňka