Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Spasticity After Stroke III: Options for Treatment

      What else works? BOTOX® (botulinum toxin type A) can be injected directly into the spastic muscles to provide months of spasticity relief. Intrathecal baclofen (ITB) therapy delivers spasticity medication to the intrathecal space (fluid flows around the spinal cord) corresponding to the spinal level of the spastic muscles. Oral medication, dorsal root rhizotomy, orthopedic surgeries and other treatments do reduce spasticity. And if you think that these medical interventions have nothing to do with therapists, think again. Physiatrists and neurologists believe that spasticity that limits function is one of the triggers for appointments for these experts in spasticity reduction. Who better than therapists to gently guide patients to these doctors for spasticity treatment?    
        A word of caution here: Once directed to a doctor who specializes in spasticity interventions, patients sometimes forget what to say and end up saying something vague like, "I want to move better." Prior to sending patients with spasticity to these doctors, tell them in clear and concise terms exactly what muscles you want the doctor to work on. If the patient has trouble with dorsiflexion because of spastic triceps surae, having the doctor BOTOX® the finger flexors is not going to help.
       The Holy Grail for spasticity reduction is a melding of doctor-prescribed medical interventions and therapist-delivered neuroplastic treatment options. The proper mix of these interventions is emerging as research goes forward. Guiding patients back to neurology and physiatry and accepting neuroplasticity as the substrate for authentic spasticity reduction are good first steps.

1 comment:

Judy H. said...

I have a foot that feels crampy most of the time. It is not spastic. I mentioned it to my physiatrist, and neurologist but they didn't do anything for it. Do you have recommendations?

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