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Inside The NIH - Movement Labs

Therapists Use Novel Therapy Systems to Help Disabled Get Most Effective Treatment

January 1, 2011

Therapists are using a novel set of systems to help people with disabilities get better treatment. By using a technology that creates a 3-D image of the patient’s movements, for example, doctors can see how the muscles are moving and make recommendations on what treatments could help most effectively.

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ABOUT MOTOR FUNCTION: Even a simple motor movement involves many different regions of the body, but the primary motor cortex of the brain is one of the most important. It sends out electrical impulses through nerve cells called neurons that control the execution of movement. Every part of the body is represented in the primary motor cortex; the left side of the brain controls the right side of the body, and vice versa. Certain diseases or brain damage can disrupt these basic functions. For instance, cerebral palsy is a disorder that affects body movement and muscle coordination because of brain damage, which interferes with messages from the brain to the body, and vice versa.

ABOUT THE NERVOUS SYSTEM: The brain is "hardwired" with connections, which are made by billions of neurons that make electricity whenever they are stimulated. The electrical patterns are called brain waves. Neurons act like the wires and gates in a computer, gathering and transmitting electrochemical signals over distances as far as several feet. The brain encodes information not by relying on single neurons, but by spreading the information across large populations of neurons, and by rapidly adapting to new circumstances. Motor neurons carry signals from the central nervous system to the muscles, skin, and glands of the body, while sensory neurons carry signals from those outer parts of the body to the central nervous system. Receptors sense things like chemicals, light, and sound and encode this information into electrochemical signals transmitted by the sensory neurons. And interneurons tie everything together by connecting the various neurons within the brain and spinal cord. The part of the brain that controls motor skills is located at the rear of the frontal lobe.

The Optical Society of America contributed to the information contained in the TV portion of this report.

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More information on this story

On The Web:

NIH Clinical Center Functional and Applied Biomechanics

To Go Inside This Science: 

Katharine Alter, MD
Medical Director of Gait Lab
Staff Clinician
National Institutes of Health
 

Leighton Chan, MD, MPH
Chief Rehabilitation Specialist
Rehabilitation Medicine Department
National Institutes of Health

The Optical Society of America 202-223-8130
info@osa.org


© 2011 American Institute of Physics