Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3450645 Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 2011 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Fattal C, Fabbro M, Rouays-Mabit H, Verollet C, Bauchet L. Metastatic paraplegia and functional outcomes: perspectives and limitations for rehabilitation care. Part 2ObjectiveTo identify functional outcomes that could justify the need for a rehabilitation care program for patients with metastatic epidural spinal cord compression (MESCC) and paraplegia.Data SourcesPublications from 1950 to January 2010 selected from 3 databases.Study SelectionOriginal articles dealing with outcome data for functional status, pain, and bladder dysfunction.Data ExtractionStandardized reading grid.Data SynthesisThe data are dominated by retrospective studies for even functional-related data, and studies from rehabilitation teams are rare. They report a functional evolution similar to a population with traumatic spinal cord injury for the first 3 months. Patients who were ambulatory before treatment retained their ability to walk, and patients who were nonambulatory before treatment could regain gait abilities. Data also showed a positive impact on pain and bladder and/or bowel dysfunction.ConclusionsBy restricting physical medicine and rehabilitation therapeutic care to a short time (1–2mo), the progression margin is possible in the short term and implies a voluntary and active therapeutic care approach for patients with paraplegia after MESCC on the basis of a codified and standardized program with clinical indicators, as well as patients' comfort indicators.

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