Worth Repeating: Evidence-Based Care Guidelines for Pediatric Constraint Induced Movement Therapy
[Source:  Cincinnati Children’s Hospital]
One of three children with cerebral palsy (CP) experiences hemiparesis:  impairment affecting one side of the body (Himmelmann 2005 [D], Hagberg  2000 [O]). Hemiparesis is also common among children who experience  traumatic brain injuries, childhood strokes, and other central nervous  system conditions.
Neonatal brachial plexus injury (BPI) caused by a birth or traumatic  injury to the brachial plexus (an injury of the peripheral nervous  system), occurs in about 1.5 per 1000 live births.(Foad 2008 [D])  Similar to children with hemiparesis, these children often present with  poor functioning of one arm while the other arm is usually without  problems.
Children with impaired functioning of one of their arms can have  disabling symptoms affecting play, school, and self-care. Hand and arm  functioning may be affected by abnormal muscle tone and flexion  synergies, decreased strength, decreased active and passive range of  motion, altered sensation, and neglect (Eliasson 2006 [X]).
Also, children with hemiplegia due to central nervous system damage are  often affected by mirror movements–unconscious and uncontrolled  movement of one hand following the same pattern as the contralateral  hand—impacting the ability to use two hands when the hands are required  to do different movements (for example, one hand stabilizes an object  while the other acts on the object). (Eliasson 2006 [X])
Current theory suggests that children with unilateral upper extremity  impairment must overcome “developmental non-use”, a term indicating that  the children never have effectively used the impaired upper extremity  (Gordon 2006 [C]). Another term frequently used in literature is  “learned non-use”, a term referring to hemiplegia in an individual who  previously had functional use of the arm (e.g. a person who had an  acquired stroke or traumatic brain injury) (Taub 1999 [S]).
Read This Entire Document / Article on Cincinnati Children’s.org
PediaStaff is Hiring!
All JobsPediaStaff hires pediatric and school-based professionals nationwide for contract assignments of 2 to 12 months. We also help clinics, hospitals, schools, and home health agencies to find and hire these professionals directly. We work with Speech-Language Pathologists, Occupational and Physical Therapists, School Psychologists, and others in pediatric therapy and education.
