Cerebral Palsy

2015年9月29日星期二

Types of Cerebral Palsy

Types of Cerebral Palsy
Cerebral Palsy (CP) is a nervous system developmental disease. Usually CP is referred to as a central movement disorder; which is caused by non-progressive cerebral injury or encephalodysplasia during pregnancy during childbirth or after birth up to about one month due to many reasons. The incidence of CP is about 1.2-2.5%, clinical features are abnormal in posture and muscular tension, involuntary movement and ataxia, which are usually associated with sensory disturbance, cognitive dysfunction, behavioral disorder, secondary skeletal muscle abnormalities and epileptic seizures. The non-progressive central movement disorders, which are also called acquired cerebral palsy, are caused by many reasons one month after birth. Approximately 10% of CP cases include: the cause of congenital brain disorder etiology, premature matrix hemorrhage, periventricular leukomalacia, hypoxic ischemic injury, spastic diplegia, infantile hemiplegia, paraplegia and quadriplegia, extrapyramidal syndrome, hands athetosis, bilirubin encephalopathy, neonatal congenital ataxia, bridge cerebella dysplasia, flaccid paralysis, which all belong to the acquired development diseases. The diseases of intrauterine infection caused by intrauterine and neonatal infection, result in cerebral malformations and anomalies, that belong to infectious development diseases. Those patients show more or less symptoms of mental retardation.
Spastic Hemiplegia
The most common type, involving one side of the body, upper limbs are shown to be worse than lower limbs, far-end worse than near-end, face is usually normal. Children often show obvious symptoms after 3 months, such as less limbs move, persistent fist, grasp reflex disappears, forearm pronation posture, circle gait and so on. Part of the patient's first symptoms can be low muscle tone, and then it turns to spasticity. Mental retardation and epilepsy are common in this type. Epileptic seizures show partial or secondarily generalized seizures. Strabismus is very common.
Spastic Quadriplegia
Spastic quadriplegia is usually found in children who suffer from severe asphyxia. Their limbs muscle tension is increased, often showing signs of opisthotonos, and with supranuclear bulbar paralysis, causing swallowing and articulation disorder. About half of the patients show signs of epilepsy and mental retardation.
Dyskinetic CP
Dyskinetic CP is found in about 10% of CP patients, main causes are hypoxic brain injury and neonatal nuclear jaundice. Patients commonly show hypotonia in early infancy, and then have extrapyramidal symptoms, such as athetosis. Salivation, dysphagia and the language barrier can be found as well. Deep tendon reflex in the lower limbs is shown to be normal or increased. Patients may have persistent primitive reflex, intelligence is mostly in the normal or critical state. About 1/4 of the patients have epilepsy. Cases caused by nuclear icterus show athetosis, sensory deafness, enamel hypoplasia, etc.
Ataxia CP

This type of CP is present in about 10% of CP patients; symptoms are usually hypotonia, balance disorder and motor retardation in infancy, Dysmetria, intention tremor in childhood, pyramid sign is not common, and many patients show signs of mental retardation, but nothing serious.

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2015年9月19日星期六

What is Epilepsy or Seizures ? Who Get Epilepsy

What is epilepsy? Will I have seizures forever?
You may have a lot of questions about epilepsy. We will help you understand the basics, answer the most common questions, and help you find resources and other information you may need. However, information alone won’t help you manage your epilepsy and find a way to cope with the effects on your daily life. You’ll need to learn how to use the information and make it work for you.
What is Epilepsy?
Epilepsy is a neurological condition which affects the nervous system. Epilepsy is also known as a seizure disorder. It is usually diagnosed after a person has had at least two seizures that were not caused by some known medical condition.
What are Seizures?
Seizures seen in epilepsy are caused by disturbances in the electrical activity of the brain. The seizures in epilepsy may be related to a brain injury or a family tendency, but most of the time the cause is unknown…
Seizures are caused by disturbances in the electrical activity of the brain.
65 MILLION: Number of people around the world who have epilepsy.
OVER 2 MILLION: Number of people in the United States who have epilepsy.
1 IN 26 people in the United States will develop epilepsy at some point in their lifetime.
BETWEEN 4 AND 10 OUT OF 1,000: Number of people on earth who live with active seizures at any one time.
150,000: Number of new cases of epilepsy in the United States each year
ONE-THIRD: Number of people with epilepsy who live with uncontrollable seizures because no available treatment works for them.

6 OUT OF 10: Number of people with epilepsy where the cause is unknown.

Who Gets Epilepsy 

Epilepsy and seizures can develop in any person at any age.
1 in 26 people will develop epilepsy in their lifetime.
Factors such as other health conditions, age, and race may make developing epilepsy and seizures more likely.
Epilepsy and seizures can develop in any person at any age. Seizures and epilepsy are more common in young children and older people.
About 1 in 100 people in the U.S. has had a single unprovoked seizure or has been diagnosed with epilepsy.
1 in 26 people will develop epilepsy (which is the tendency to recurring seizures) in their lifetime. People with certain conditions may be at greater risk. (See "What causes epilepsy and seizures?")
Each year, about 48 of every 100,000 people will develop epilepsy. However, seizures may occur more often in different age groups (very young and older people), in different races, and in different areas of the world.
At any one point in time, between 2.2 and 3 million people are treated for epilepsy.
The 2.2 million figure comes from a study of people in Rochester, Minnesota, who were followed for many years. This data is outdated and we aren’t sure how true the number is now.
The higher number of 3 million people comes from a telephone survey of people who report that they have been treated for epilepsy.
Epilepsy is the 4th most common neurological condition and epilepsy affects more than 65 million people worldwide,
More men than women have epilepsy overall by a small amount.
When are people most likely to get epilepsy?
New cases of epilepsy are most common among children, especially during the first year of life.
The rate of new cases of epilepsy gradually goes down until about age 10 and then becomes stable.
After age 55, the rate of new cases of epilepsy starts to increase, as people develop strokes, brain tumors, or Alzheimer's disease, which all can cause epilepsy.
Does epilepsy occur more often in people after traumatic brain injury?
Yes, seizures do happen frequently in people who have had a traumatic injury to the brain. This may include a fall, blow to the head, gunshot wound or other traumatic injury.
Seizures can occur early after the injury, for example within days to the first few weeks of the initial trauma. These seizures are usually the result of the initial event that cause bleeding, trauma or swelling of the brain. These early seizures may go away after the acute injury calms down.
Seizures can also occur later on after the acute injury has resolved or been treated. These seizures are caused by scarring to the brain from the initial injury. The brain cells are not working as they did before, and are capable of producing ‘electrical storms’ known as seizures. When these seizures occur independently from the initial injury, a person is said to have post-traumatic epilepsy (meaning seizures caused by or occurring after brain trauma).
Members of the armed forces who have been in combat are particularly vulnerable to post-traumatic epilepsy. For example, up to 53% of soldiers who had brain injuries during Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom are at risk for post-traumatic epilepsy.

For more information, visit our Veterans page.

2015年9月17日星期四

Cerebral Palsy Symptoms And Causes


Causes of Cerebral Palsy
Acquired cerebral palsy: Approximately 10-20% of children in the United States with cerebral palsy (CP) acquire the disorder after birth. Brain damage in the first few months or years of life, brain infections, such as bacterial meningitis or viral encephalitis, or head injury account for many of the cases of acquired cerebral palsy. In such cases, the disorder may result from brain infections like bacterial meningitis (inflammation of the lining of the brain caused by a bacteria), viral encephalitis (inflammation of the brain caused by a viral infection), head trauma sustained from an accident, fall, or inflicted injuries (such as shaken baby syndrome).
Congenital cerebral palsy: CP that occurs at birth is often the result of specific events during pregnancy or around the time of birth. These events result in damage to the motor centers in the developing brain. Often times, however, congenital cerebral palsy may not be detected for months. However, birth complications account for only about 3-13% of congenital CP cases.
Infections during pregnancy: Viruses such as rubella (German measles) or herpes group B can infect the developing fetus in a pregnant woman and cause damage to the developing nervous system. Brain injury in the developing fetus may also be caused by other infections such as cytomegalovirus (herpesvirus type 5) and toxoplasmosis (a protozoal infection). Infections of the placental may also be associated with cerebral palsy.
Cerebral Palsy Symptoms And Causes

Jaundice: If left untreated, severe jaundice can damage the brain. Jaundice is a condition produced when excess amounts of bilirubin circulating in the blood stream dissolve in the subcutaneous fat (the layer of fat just beneath the skin), causing a yellowish appearance of the skin and the whites of the eyes. With the exception of physiologic jaundice in the newborn (normal newborn jaundice in the first week of life), all other jaundice indicates overload or damage to the liver or inability to move bilirubin from the liver through the biliary tract to the gut. Jaundice in an infant, child, or an adult should always be evaluated by a doctor.
Newborn jaundice is common and, unless it is associated with an abnormal condition, it will clear without treatment. Gilbert's syndrome is another hereditary condition in which mild jaundice develops during times of stress. This condition, once recognized, requires no further treatment or evaluation. There are also other more rare hereditary causes of elevated bilirubin levels. All other jaundice is the result of an underlying disease, condition, or toxicity.
A yellow-to-orange color may be imparted to the skin by excessive intake of beta carotene, the orange pigment seen in carrots. Individuals who consume large quantities of carrots or carrot juice or take beta-carotene supplements may develop a distinctly yellow-orange cast to their skin. This condition is called hypercarotenemia or just carotenemia. Hypercarotenemia is easily distinguished from jaundice in that the sclera, or the white of the eyes, remains white, while people with true jaundice have a yellow sclera.
Rh incompatibility: When the mother's body produces immune cells called antibodies that destroy the fetus's blood cells, this may lead to a form of jaundice in the newborn.
Severe lack of oxygen: Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy is the name of a condition that occurs when the brain is deprived of oxygen for a prolonged period of time during labor and child delivery. Brain damage may occur. Birth complications, including asphyxia (lack of oxygen to the brain), account for approximately six percent of congenital cerebral palsy cases. Birth asphyxia is associated with spastic quadriplegia, the most commonly occurring form of CP.
Brain hemorrhage: Brain hemorrhage or bleeding may occur in the fetus during pregnancy or in newborns around the time of birth. Bleeding can damage fetal brain tissue and cause neurological problems, including congenital CP. These hemorrhages are a type of stroke that may be caused by broken, abnormal, or clogged blood vessels in or leading to the brain or by respiratory distress, a common breathing disorder in premature infants.
Diagnosis of Cerebral Palsy
Typically, doctors diagnose cerebral palsy (CP) in infants by testing their motor skills and thoroughly analyzing their medical history. A medical history, diagnostic tests, and regular check-ups may be required to confirm the diagnosis of CP or to eliminate the possibility of other disorders.
Unnaturally soft, relaxed, or floppy muscle tone is called hypotonia. Stiff or rigid muscle tone is called hypertonia. Some infants with CP have hypotonia in the first two or three months of life and then develop hypertonia. They also might develop an unusual posture or favor one side of the body.
A newborn held on its back and tilted so its legs are above its head will automatically respond with the Moro reflex, extending its arms in a gesture that resembles an embrace. This reflex usually disappears after about six months. Infants with cerebral palsy often retain it for an abnormally long period.
Signs of hand preference are also observed. When an object is held in front and to the side, infants usually do not display a tendency to use either the right or left hand. This is normal during the first 12 months of life. Infants with spastic hemiplegia, however, often develop hand preference early, indicating one side of their body is stronger than the other.
The doctor will look for other conditions that can be linked to CP, such as seizures, mental impairment, and vision or hearing problems.
Intelligence tests often are given to a child with CP to evaluate mental impairment, but the results can be misleading and there is a risk of underestimating intelligence. For instance, a child with movement, sensation, or speech problems associated with CP would have difficulty performing well on such tests.
Rule out other conditions: If motor skills decline over time, there may be genetic disease, muscle or metabolic disorder, or tumor in the nervous system, either coexistent or instead of CP. The doctor must rule out other disorders that cause movement problems (such as Huntington's disease), identify any coexisting disorder, and determine if the condition is changing.
Lab tests: A chromosome analysis may be performed to identify a genetic anomaly (such as in Down syndrome or Huntington's disease) when abnormalities in features or organ systems are present. Thyroid function tests may reveal low levels of thyroid hormone, which can produce several congenital defects and severe mental retardation. Hyperammonemia, or a high level of ammonia in the blood, may lead to central nervous system toxicity (including movement disorders). A deficiency in any of the enzymes involved in breaking down amino acids can cause hyperammonemia. This may be due to a liver disorder or a defect in metabolism.
Visual tests: Imaging tests are helpful in diagnosing hydrocephalus (condition in which abnormal accumulation of cerebrospinal fluid causes pressure in the brain), structural abnormalities, and tumors. An electroencephalogram (EEG) traces electrical activity in the brain and can reveal patterns that suggest a seizure disorder. Computed tomography (CT scan) can show congenital (birth) malformations and hemorrhage (excessive bleeding) in infants. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) uses a magnetic field and radio waves to create pictures of the internal structures of the brain. This study is performed on older children. It defines abnormalities of white matter and motor cortex more clearly than other methods. Ultrasound uses the echoes of sound waves projected into the body to form a picture called a sonogram. It is often used in infants before the bones of the skull harden and close to detect cysts and abnormal structures in the brain.
Electromyography (EMG) and nerve conduction velocity (NCV) studies may be performed when a nerve or muscle disorder is suspected. These tests, which can be used in combination, are often referred to as EMG/NCV studies. NCV is administered before EMG and measures the speed at which nerves transmit electrical signals which can help diagnose CP. During NCV, electrodes are placed on the skin over a nerve that supplies a specific muscle or muscle group. A mild, brief electrical stimulus is delivered through the electrode and the response of the muscle is detected, amplified, and displayed. The strength of the signal is also measured. Neurological conditions can cause the NCV to slow down or to be slower on one side of the body. EMG measures nerve impulses within the muscles. Tiny electrodes are placed in the muscles in the arms and legs and the electronic responses are observed using an oscilloscope (an instrument that displays movement of an electric current). As muscles contract, they emit a weak electrical signal that can be detected, amplified, and tracked using the oscilloscope, providing information about how well the muscles are working.
Signs And Symptoms of Cerebral Palsy
Spastic cerebral palsy: Spastic cerebral palsy (CP) is the most common form, affecting approximately 70% of CP patients. This form is characterized by stiff and permanently contracted muscles. Spastic CP has a jerky, unpredictable effect on movement, causing difficulty in moving from position to position. Spastic cerebral palsy consists of subcategories, including diplegia (both arms of both legs are affected), hemiplegia (either the right arm and leg or left arm and leg are affected), quadriplegia (all arms and legs are affected), monoplegia (only one arm or leg affected), and triplegia (three arms or legs affected).
Spastic diplegia: Spastic diplegia affects the legs more than the arms. The legs often turn in and cross at the knees. This causes a scissors gait, in which the hips are flexed, the knees nearly touch, the feet are flexed, and the ankles turn out from the leg, causing toe-walking. Learning disabilities and seizures are less common than in spastic hemiplegia.
Spastic hemiplegia: Individuals with spastic hemiplegia (hemiparesis) also may experience hemiparetic tremors or uncontrollable shaking of the limbs on one side of the body. Severe hemiparetic tremors can seriously impair movement. The arm is generally affected more than the leg. Learning disabilities, vision problems, seizures, and dysfunction of the muscles of the mouth and tongue are classic symptoms.
Spastic quadriplegia: Spastic quadriplegia involves all four limbs. There is dysfunction of the muscles of the mouth and tongue, seizures, medical complications, and increased risk for cognitive difficulties.
Ataxic cerebral palsy: Ataxic cerebral palsy is much less common that spastic, affecting approximately 5- 10% of CP patients. The main effect of this type is on the child's sense of depth perception and balance. This is often accompanied by poor coordination and children affected by ataxic cerebral palsy can display an abnormal gait when walking, as well as difficulty with precise movement. Another characteristic of ataxic cerebral palsy is the intention tremor. These tremors are initiated by a voluntary movement, such as reaching for a light switch, and become more severe as the individual gets closer to the objective.
Athetoid cerebral palsy: Athetoid or dyskinetic cerebral palsy affects about 10-20% of patients. Athetoid CP is characterized by athetosis (slow, uncontrolled, writhing movements of the hands, feet, arms, or legs). Patients also may have chorea (abrupt, irregular, jerky movements), choreoathetosis (a combination of athetosis and chorea), or dystonia (slow rhythmic movements with muscle tone abnormalities and abnormal postures).
Mixed cerebral palsy: Mixed cerebral palsy is a condition where two or more types of CP exist. This occurs in 10% of CP cases.
Speech: Just as patients have problems with muscle control in their arms and legs, they also have difficulties controlling their tongue, mouth, lips, jaw, and breath flow. As a result, they might have problems with speech. The most common speech problem is called dysarthria. This condition causes speech to be slow and slurred and, in some cases, hypernasal (too much air flow through the nose) or hyponasal (not enough air flow through the nose).
Drooling: There are a number of treatments available to combat the problem of drooling, including surgery, anticholinergics (drugs that reduce saliva flow), and biofeedback (helps allow patients to know when they are drooling).
Eating: Cerebral palsy can affect the muscle groups involved in the face and jaw, which can lead to difficulty eating. In severe cases, this can result in malnutrition and poor growth and development.
Incontinence: Incontinence is more commonly known as poor bladder control. This can take a number of forms, including enuresis or bed wetting, urination during physical activity, or a slow leak from the bladder.
Complications of Cerebral Palsy
Some individuals with cerebral palsy (CP) have other conditions, such as impaired intellectual development, seizures, failure to grow and thrive, and vision and sense of touch problems.
Roughly one-third of patients with CP also have mild intellectual impairment or a decrease in intelligence. Another one-third are moderately or severely impaired and the remainder are intellectually normal. Mental impairment is most common in children with spastic quadriplegia.
As many as one-half of all patients with cerebral palsy have seizures in which uncontrolled bursts of electricity disrupt the brain's normal pattern of electrical activity. Seizures that recur without a direct trigger, such as a fever, are classified as epilepsy. Seizures generally are tonic-clonic or partial. Tonic-clonic seizures spread throughout the brain, typically causing the patient to cry out, followed by unconsciousness, twitching legs and arms, convulsive body movements, and loss of bladder control. Partial seizures are confined to one part of the brain and may be simple or complex. Simple partial seizures cause muscle twitching, chewing movement, and numbness or tingling. Complex partial seizures can produce hallucinations, staggering, random movement, and impaired consciousness or confusion.
Children with moderate-to-severe cerebral palsy, especially those with spastic quadriplegia, often experience failure to grow or thrive. Infants fail to gain weight normally, young children may be abnormally short, and teenagers may be short for their age and may have slow sexual development. These phenomena may be caused by a combination of poor nutrition and damage to the brain centers that control growth.
Some individuals, particularly those with spastic hemiplegia, have muscles and limbs that are smaller than normal. Limbs on the side of the body affected by CP may grow slower than those on the other side. Hands and feet are most severely affected. The affected foot in cases of hemiplegia usually is the smaller of the two, even in patients who walk, suggesting the size difference is due not to disuse but to a disrupted growth process. Limbs affected by CP in most instances do not reach normal physical size.
Vision and hearing problems are more common in people with cerebral palsy than in the general population. Differences in the left and right eye muscles often cause the eyes to be misaligned. This condition, called strabismus, causes double vision. In children, however, the brain often adapts by ignoring signals from one eye. Because strabismus can lead to poor vision and impaired depth perception, some physicians recommend corrective surgery.
Patients with hemiparesis may have hemianopia, a condition marked by impaired vision or blindness in half of the visual field in one or both eyes. A related condition, called homonymous hemianopia, causes impairment in the right or left half of the visual fields in both eyes.
Sensations of touch or pain may be impaired. An individual with stereognosis, for example, has difficulty perceiving or identifying the form and nature of an object placed in their hand using the sense of touch alone. A decrease in feeling may contribute to the difficulty in perception.

Hip dislocation, scoliosis (curvature of the spine), incontinence (inability to control the urine flow), constipation, dental caries (tooth decay), bronchitis (inflammation of the bronchial tubes), skin sores, and asthma are other complications commonly experienced by people with CP .

2015年9月12日星期六

Causes of epilepsy With Cerebral Palsy


In over half of epilepsy cases, a cause cannot be found. If there is an identifiable cause, it usually involves the brain being affected by a condition.
The brain is a delicate mix of nerve cells, electrical impulses and chemicals, known as neurotransmitters. Any damage has the potential to disrupt the workings of the brain and cause seizures.
There are two main categories of epilepsy:
idiopathic (or primary) epilepsy – where no apparent cause for epilepsy can be found, but there may be a family history, suggesting that the condition is inherited
symptomatic (or secondary) epilepsy – where there is a known cause for a person’s epilepsy
Idiopathic epilepsy
In many cases, no cause of epilepsy is found. This may be because medical equipment is not advanced enough to spot some types of damage, or because the epilepsy has a genetic cause.
Many researchers have suggested that small genetic changes in the brain could be the cause of epilepsy. Current research is looking for defects in certain genes that may affect electrical transmission in the brain.
A number of studies have been carried out; however, no strong association has so far been found between any particular genes and the development of epilepsy.
Symptomatic epilepsy
Causes of symptomatic epilepsy can include:
cerebrovascular disease (problems with the blood vessels that supply the brain) – such as a stroke or subarachnoid haemorrhage
brain tumours
severe head injuries
drug abuse and alcohol misuse
infections that can damage the brain – such as meningitis
problems during birth that cause a baby to be deprived of oxygen – such as the umbilical cord getting twisted or compressed during labour
some parts of the brain not developing properly
Although some of these problems can cause epilepsy in childhood, symptomatic epilepsy is generally more common in older people – particularly those over 60 years of age.
Seizure triggers
For many people with epilepsy, seizures can occur without any obvious trigger. However, certain circumstances or the use of certain substances can sometimes precede a seizure. These include:
stress
lack of sleep
drinking alcohol
some medications and illegal drugs
in women, monthly periods
flashing lights (this is an uncommon trigger that affects only 5% of people with epilepsy, and is known as photosensitive epilepsy)

Keeping a seizure diary is a good way to help find out what might trigger your seizures. Every time you have a seizure, record it and make a note of what you were doing. Over time, you might notice some potentially avoidable things that seem to trigger your symptoms.

About Epilepsy

2015年9月11日星期五

The Effects of Stroke at Birth

Although strokes are commonly associated with adults, they can occur in newborns during the birth process or in utero. Neonatal strokes can be ischemic, meaning a blood clot reduces blood flow to an area of the brain, or hemorrhagic, meaning bleeding occurs within the brain. Around 25 in 10,000 newborns suffer strokes, the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) states. Causes of neonatal stroke include congenital heart defects, blood disorders, asphyxia, trauma and infection. The effects of neonatal stoke can impact a child for life.
Seizures in the newborn period most often first draw attention to the possibility of stroke, lead author K.B. Nelson of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke reports in Lancet Neurology in a March 2004 article entitled “Stroke in newborn infants.” Seizure activity in neonates may not be as easily identified as it is in older children and adults. Symptoms of seizures related to neonatal stroke include stiffening or tightening of muscles, bicycling motions, apnea, periods of no breathing and twitching followed by period of relaxation, neurologist Gabrielle de Veber, M.D., director of the Children’s Stroke Program at the Hospital for Sick Children, states. Emory University reports that labor and delivery are often uneventful and that symptoms don’t appear for the first 12 to 48 hours. Seizure medication reduces the frequency of seizure activity. Epileptic seizures may continue to occur and require treatment in childhood as a long term complication of neonatal stroke, according to the Hospital for Sick Children.
Cerebral Palsy

According to Pediatric Stroke, perinatal arterial ischemia related to stroke in the three days surrounding birth accounts for 50 to 70 percent of congenital hemiplegic cerebral palsy, or cerebral palsy which affects one side of the body only. Cerebral palsy, a permanent motor disorder, may go unrecognized after neonatal stroke for four to six months, when an infant shows signs of weakness on one side or uses only one side of the body, CHOP reports.

How to Treat Cerebral Palsy

Cerebral Palsy (CP) is non-progressive brain damage syndrome that results from kinds of causes which might occur during delivery or after birth. Both abnormal brain development and brain damages could lead to CP. Risk factors include premature birth, infection during pregnancy and head trauma in early babyhood. Drugs-taking and exposure to toxic or hazardous substances would result in CP too. Patients wanting to mitigate this disease could consider our Cerebral Palsy treatment and Cerebral Palsy rehabilitation.
How to Treat Cerebral Palsy

II Cerebral Palsy Symptoms:

Early Cerebral Palsy Symptoms can be represented by patients’ abnormal performance. For example, CP kid-patients are excessively easily irritated and they continuously cry a lot. Parents would have difficulties feeding them because they can’t smoothly suck and swallow. CP patients may also suffer movement functional retardation including development retardation or retrogression s and so on. Those with irregular muscle tone might have rigidity, abnormal muscle tension as well as unbalanced muscle tone.
III CP Treatment and Rehabilitation
Beijing Erkang Baiwang Hospital possesses world-leading and effective Cerebral Palsy treatment and Cerebral Palsy rehabilitation. Dr.Zhang Lanting’s Surgery is especially mentionable.

Cerebral Palsy Treatment

Zhang Lanting’s Central Nervous System Adjustment Surgery (CNSAS) has been conducted on more than 2000 patients without errors. He also developed a kind of very unique Limbs Orthopedic Surgery. His Meridian Regulating surgery is the combination of his ancestral knowledge and his own practical experience gained through a time span of more than 50 years. It compounds the Meridian Theory and the Chinese Medicines to establish the unique surgery, which possesses exceptional features. The following are pictures showing the curative effects.
Besides Zhang’s methods, we also have NGF treatment for Cerebral Palsy which belongs to the conservative type compared with surgeries. It can repair damaged tissues and cells inside a brain. Patients who receive this kind of treatment can also acquire a much better health condition.
Cerebral Palsy Rehabilitation
We also have a distinctive Rehabilitation Center which enables patients to receive various kinds of therapies according to different Cerebral Palsy symptoms.

The distinctive way of treatment in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) is compounded together with the Western traditional Rehabilitation Medicine in our Rehabilitation Center.

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