Search results for "Motor delay"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Magnetic stimulation study in patients with myotonic dystrophy

1997

To further define motor nervous system alterations in myotonic dystrophy (MD), motor potentials to transcranial and cervical magnetic stimulation (MEPs) were recorded from the right abductor pollicis brevis muscle in 10 patients with MD and in 10 healthy controls. Cortical and cervical latencies, central motor conduction time (CMCT), stimulus threshold intensity and cortical MEP amplitudes expressed both as absolute values and as %M were analysed. MEP cervical latency, absolute or relative amplitude and excitability threshold did not significantly differ in patients and controls. The mean cortical motor latency and CMCT were significantly prolonged in MD patients with respect to normal subj…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentStimulationStimulus (physiology)Myotonic dystrophyMagneticsInternal medicineMotor systemmedicineHumansMyotonic Dystrophybusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceMiddle AgedNeurophysiologyEvoked Potentials MotorMyotoniamedicine.diseasemedicine.anatomical_structureMotor delayCardiologyFemaleNeurology (clinical)businessNeuroscienceMotor cortexElectroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology/Electromyography and Motor Control
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Two distinct pathways for Developmental Coordination Disorder: Persistence and resolution

2003

This article describes the perceptual motor, educational and social outcome of early motor delay in a group of 17-18 year old Finnish adolescents who were originally evaluated at age 5. The study group consisted of 65 adolescents: 22 with significant motor problems (or developmental coordination disorder, DCD), 23 with minor motor problems (intermediate group) and 20 controls. The goal of this study was to reassess the results obtained when they were age 15 and to determine whether the variables used earlier could still discriminate the adolescents at age 17. The results showed that at age 17 all perceptual motor tasks differentiated the three groups. The DCD group performed less well than …

MaleLongitudinal studyAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjectIntelligenceBiophysicsExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyDevelopmental psychologyIntermediate groupDiscriminant function analysisPerceptionmedicineHumansOrthopedics and Sports MedicineChildmedia_commonWechsler ScalesWechsler Adult Intelligence ScaleGeneral MedicinePrognosismedicine.diseaseSelf ConceptMotor Skills DisordersDevelopmental disorderIdentity developmentMotor delayMotor SkillsChild PreschoolEducational StatusFemalePsychomotor DisordersPsychologySocial AdjustmentFollow-Up Studies
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Oral, facial, digital, vertebral anomalies with psychomotor delay: a mild form of OFD type Gabrielli?

2002

A girl with oral, facial, and digital anomalies presented at birth with a large cleft palate filled by a nasopharyngeal mass and was found later to have several vertebral anomalies and mental retardation. A similar phenotype has been previously reported in a sporadic male patient [Gabrielli et al., 1994: Am J Med Genet 53:290-293], suggesting a new variant form of oral-facial-digital syndrome.

Oral facial digitalVertebral anomaliesOFD syndromemedicineHumansAbnormalities MultipleMild formGenetics (clinical)cleft palatebusiness.industryhairy polypInfant NewbornBrainInfantAnatomyOFD syndrome; cleft palate; hairy polyp; vertebral anomalies; occipital anomaliesNew variantvertebral anomaliesmedicine.diseaseoccipital anomaliesVertebraDevelopmental disorderstomatognathic diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureEl NiñoFemalePsychomotor DisordersbusinessTomography X-Ray ComputedPsychomotor delayNeckAmerican journal of medical genetics
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Clumsiness in Adolescence: Educational, Motor, and Social Outcomes of Motor Delay Detected at 5 Years

1994

This paper reports the follow-up at age 15 of a group of children who were diagnosed at age 5 as having delayed motor development. The group of children who were clumsy and the control group still differed in motor performance 10 years later: 46% of the members of the early motor delay group were classified as different from the control group on motor and perceptual tasks. The remainder made up an intermediate group that could not be clearly distinguished from the other groups. Adolescents with stable motor problems had fewer social hobbies and pastimes and had lower academic ambitions for their future than the controls, although the lower academic ambitions also reflect their lower academi…

School performanceMotor delayClumsinessPerceptionmedia_common.quotation_subjectErikson's stages of psychosocial developmentPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationAcademic achievementSocial acceptancePsychologyMotor skillDevelopmental psychologymedia_commonAdapted Physical Activity Quarterly
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