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1.
Pers Ubiquitous Comput ; 27(3): 831-844, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33679282

ABSTRACT

Many Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and post-COVID-19 patients experience muscle fatigues. Early detection of muscle fatigue and muscular paralysis helps in the diagnosis, prediction, and prevention of COVID-19 and post-COVID-19 patients. Nowadays, the biomedical and clinical domains widely used the electromyography (EMG) signal due to its ability to differentiate various neuromuscular diseases. In general, nerves or muscles and the spinal cord influence numerous neuromuscular disorders. The clinical examination plays a major role in early finding and diagnosis of these diseases; this research study focused on the prediction of muscular paralysis using EMG signals. Machine learning-based diagnosis of the diseases has been widely used due to its efficiency and the hybrid feature extraction (FE) methods with deep learning classifier are used for the muscular paralysis disease prediction. The discrete wavelet transform (DWT) method is applied to decompose the EMG signal and reduce feature degradation. The proposed hybrid FE method consists of Yule-Walker, Burg's method, Renyi entropy, mean absolute value, min-max voltage FE, and other 17 conventional features for prediction of muscular paralysis disease. The hybrid FE method has the advantage of extract the relevant features from the signals and the Relief-F feature selection (FS) method is applied to select the optimal relevant feature for the deep learning classifier. The University of California, Irvine (UCI), EMG-Lower Limb Dataset is used to determine the performance of the proposed classifier. The evaluation shows that the proposed hybrid FE method achieved 88% of precision, while the existing neural network (NN) achieved 65% of precision and the support vector machine (SVM) achieved 35% of precision on whole EMG signal.

2.
J Craniomaxillofac Surg ; 44(5): 584-9, 2016 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27020772

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The etiology of deep bite is multifactorial. One of the causes is increased muscular activity. This makes the treatment of deep bite malocclusions difficult and often results in relapse in many cases. In this work we compared patients with surgical orthognathic treatment only and surgical orthognathic treatment with additional injections of botulinum toxin after mandibular advancement for class II division 2 malocclusion. MATERIAL AND METHODS: This is a prospective study. Adult patients were assessed pretreatment (T1), posttreatment (T2), and long-term after 1 year (T3). In total, 32 patients (mean age, 30.7 years; 23 women and 9 men) reached the study end point (T3); 24 patients were treated without botulinum toxin and 8 patients received preoperative injections of botulinum toxin. RESULTS: Significant differences between both groups were observed, with a more stable result for the experimental group treated with botulinum toxin. DISCUSSION: In a selective group of adult patients with a class II division II incisor relationship and with a class II skeletal base, botulinum toxin injections can effectively prevent relapse. This may present an alternative to a conventional myotomy.


Subject(s)
Botulinum Toxins/therapeutic use , Mandibular Advancement , Neurotoxins/therapeutic use , Osteotomy , Overbite/therapy , Adult , Combined Modality Therapy , Female , Humans , Injections, Intramuscular , Male , Prospective Studies , Secondary Prevention
3.
Zhongguo Gu Shang ; 29(7): 636-639, 2016 Jul 25.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29232782

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To analyze the causes of muscular paralysis due to C5 nerve root injury after anterior cervical decompression and fusion (ACDF) and explore its prevention way. METHODS: From January 2005 to December 2015, 310 patients underwent ACDF in our hospital. Of them, 9 cases occurred muscular paralysis due to C5 nerve root injury after operation. The clinical data of 9 patients were retrospectively analyzed. There were 8 males and 1 female, aged from 51 to 84 years with an average of 64 years. Two cases underwent internal fixation and intervertebral fusion with one segment, 6 cases with two segments, 1 case with three segments. Simple deltoid muscle weakness, pain, numbness happened in 7 cases, simultaneously biceps brachii muscle weakness, pain, numbness in 2 cases. Muscle strength was 0 grade in 1 case, 1 grade in 3 cases, 2 grades in 4 cases, 3 grades in 1 case. RESULTS: The follow up time of 9 patients was more than 12 months and the longest was 24 months with an average of 14 months. Muscle strength of 7 patients recovered to 4-5 grades. Recovering time after operation was directly proportional to the degree of injury, those patients with muscle strength level more than 2, usually could have significant improvement within 3 weeks. The JOA score improved from 10.89±1.89 preoperatively to 8.92±1.91 postoperative C5 nerve root palsy to 14.48±2.10 at final follow up, with significant difference(P<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: More complicated factors result in C5 nerve root injury after ACDF. Except those suffered severe grinding contusion and amputation, most of the patients can get satisfactory prognosis. Strict control of the operation indication, selection of the right surgical segment with accurate manipulation, control of the distraction of intervertebral space and the width of the multilevel anterior cervical corpectomy, are main methods to prevent the complication.


Subject(s)
Decompression, Surgical/adverse effects , Paralysis/prevention & control , Postoperative Complications/prevention & control , Radiculopathy/prevention & control , Spinal Nerve Roots , Cervical Vertebrae , Female , Humans , Male , Paralysis/etiology , Radiculopathy/etiology , Retrospective Studies , Spinal Fusion , Treatment Outcome
4.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM (Western Pacific) | ID: wpr-304287

ABSTRACT

<p><b>OBJECTIVE</b>To analyze the causes of muscular paralysis due to C₅ nerve root injury after anterior cervical decompression and fusion (ACDF) and explore its prevention way.</p><p><b>METHODS</b>From January 2005 to December 2015, 310 patients underwent ACDF in our hospital. Of them, 9 cases occurred muscular paralysis due to C₅ nerve root injury after operation. The clinical data of 9 patients were retrospectively analyzed. There were 8 males and 1 female, aged from 51 to 84 years with an average of 64 years. Two cases underwent internal fixation and intervertebral fusion with one segment, 6 cases with two segments, 1 case with three segments. Simple deltoid muscle weakness, pain, numbness happened in 7 cases, simultaneously biceps brachii muscle weakness, pain, numbness in 2 cases. Muscle strength was 0 grade in 1 case, 1 grade in 3 cases, 2 grades in 4 cases, 3 grades in 1 case.</p><p><b>RESULTS</b>The follow up time of 9 patients was more than 12 months and the longest was 24 months with an average of 14 months. Muscle strength of 7 patients recovered to 4-5 grades. Recovering time after operation was directly proportional to the degree of injury, those patients with muscle strength level more than 2, usually could have significant improvement within 3 weeks. The JOA score improved from 10.89±1.89 preoperatively to 8.92±1.91 postoperative C₅ nerve root palsy to 14.48±2.10 at final follow up, with significant difference(<0.05).</p><p><b>CONCLUSIONS</b>More complicated factors result in C₅ nerve root injury after ACDF. Except those suffered severe grinding contusion and amputation, most of the patients can get satisfactory prognosis. Strict control of the operation indication, selection of the right surgical segment with accurate manipulation, control of the distraction of intervertebral space and the width of the multilevel anterior cervical corpectomy, are main methods to prevent the complication.</p>

5.
Case Rep Ophthalmol ; 5(3): 289-91, 2014 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25408667

ABSTRACT

Diplopia is an infrequent complication after blepharoplasty. Most of the cases are in its vertical form due to trauma of the extraocular muscles. In this article, we present a case of horizontal diplopia following cosmetic upper blepharoplasty; we review the literature on this unexpected complication and offer some recommendations to avoid it.

6.
Acta Clin Belg ; 69(2): 120-1, 2014 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24724752

ABSTRACT

Cocaine abuse has been associated with a number of psychiatric, medical and neurological complications. Here we report the case of a male patient who suffered an episode of severe muscular weakness after cocaine abuse.


Subject(s)
Cocaine-Related Disorders/physiopathology , Muscle Weakness/chemically induced , Adult , Humans , Hypokalemia/chemically induced , Male , Muscle Weakness/diagnosis , Muscle Weakness/drug therapy , Muscle Weakness/physiopathology , Potassium Chloride/administration & dosage
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