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Health and medicine
Course: Health and medicine > Unit 9
Lesson 11: Neurodevelopmental disorders- What is Down syndrome?
- What is ADHD?
- Intro to neurodevelopment milestones
- Neurodevelopmental disorders: Sufficient and necessary causes
- What is cerebral palsy and what causes it?
- Types of cerebral palsy part 1 - Spastic
- Types of cerebral palsy part 2 - Dyskinetic and ataxic
- Diagnosing cerebral palsy
- Managing cerebral palsy
- What is autism spectrum disorder?
- What is autism spectrum disorder?
- What is Tourette's?
- Diagnosing autism spectrum disorder
- Managing autism spectrum disorder
- What is asperger syndrome?
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Managing cerebral palsy
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Want to join the conversation?
- At, physiotherapy was mentioned as a form treatment to help with stretching and engaging muscles that are normally unused to keep them healthy. Are there any alternative treatments that do not use medications such as occupational therapy or yoga that would assist with managing CP? 8:29(6 votes)
- Unfortunately, no. Cerebral Palsy is required by taking medication, physiotherapy or other treatments that are used to manage the neurodevelopment disorder.(2 votes)
- Can some forms or symptoms in palsy affect sleep and/or concentration?
Also since the medications block areas of the brain, is it possible for the medications to create unwanted side effects?(2 votes)- Most medications have unwanted side-effects, particularly ones that interact with the brain in some way.(1 vote)
- With the botox injections... How often do those have to be administered? Why is botox preferred over baclofen for milder cases of spastic cerebral palsy?(1 vote)
Video transcript
- [Voiceover] So this
little boy here has been diagnosed with cerebral palsy, and we want to look at
how we might go about managing this condition. Now you might have noticed
there that I said that we want to manage it, I
didn’t say anything about curing his cerebral
palsy, and that’s because cerebral palsy is a lifelong disorder. The damage that has occurred
in the movement centers of the brain and caused cerebral palsy, it’s permanent. We don’t really have a way of undoing or totally fixing this damage. So we can’t really cure
or even completely treat cerebral palsy. So instead what we want to do is focus on reducing or
managing the problems that someone with cerebral
palsy experiences. So in order for us to figure out what we might need to do, let’s start off by checking out this
spectrum here that shows us the range of movement
impairments that someone with cerebral palsy can experience. Now, people with cerebral palsy don’t just have movement impairments,
and we’ll talk more about some of the other
problems that can arise shortly. But for now I just want to
focus in on this one aspect of cerebral palsy. So the spectrum here
is pretty wide, right? So at the mild end of
our spectrum we’ve got a kid here who seems to be able to walk and run around without much assistance. And then on the severe end of our spectrum we’ve got a kid here in
a wheelchair who needs a lot of assistance to get around. So these are kind of the two extreme ends of the spectrum of movement impairments that we can see in someone
with cerebral palsy. So someone with cerebral
palsy can fall kind of anywhere along this wide spectrum, and where they fall, well that depends on the kind of brain damage that they have and how bad that damage is. So when we look at this
spectrum you can probably imagine that someone
over here on the spectrum is gonna have very
different needs than someone over here on the spectrum. So what we need to do to manage
this person’s cerebral palsy well, it might look a little
different compared to what we need to do to manage this
person’s cerebral palsy. So considering the diversity
of movement impairments that different people with
cerebral palsy can have, well you can imagine how diverse managing cerebral palsy can be between
these different people cause we need to individualize
our management plans to make sure that we’re
addressing the strengths and the limitations that each
person with cerebral palsy has. So let’s check out some
of the tools that we have to manage cerebral palsy. So if we start off on the
mild end of our spectrum here, what might we see over here? Well for someone on the
mild end of our spectrum if they have spastic cerebral palsy, so the most common type of cerebral palsy, where the affected
muscles are really stiff, well they might have a bit
of this muscle stiffness. And you might remember
that this stiffness occurs because the muscles are
actually too active. They’re getting too many
messages from the neurons that control them, and that’s
what makes them really stiff. So one thing that we can do to help reduce this muscle stiffness, is
we can try to intervene here with medications that block
some of those extra signals going from the neurons to the muscles. So one of these medications
that we often use for just this purpose in
someone with cerebral palsy is actually botox. The same botox that you’ve probably seen on late night tv commercials
about getting rid of wrinkles on your face. So it’s actually
interesting how botox works. It’s actually a neurotoxin,
it relaxes muscles. So in the case of those
wrinkles in the tv commercials, botox relaxes the muscles
that cause the wrinkles. And so for cerebral palsy it
does a really similar thing. It actually does the exact same thing. It makes the stiff muscles
in spastic cerebral palsy less stiff, but there’s a bit of a catch. Botox doesn’t really
like to travel very far, so it needs to be injected
straight into the muscles that we want to make less stuff. So we do our little botox injection and then the toxin, what
it does is it actually prevents the neurons from
being able to talk to and stimulate the muscles,
and it does this by blocking the release of a chemical
called acetylcholine from these neurons. And it’s the acetylcholine
that the neurons are sending to the muscles to stimulate
them and make them active. So when botox this
acetylcholine message from even reaching the muscles,
the muscles aren’t able to be so active anymore,
and this helps reduce that muscle stiffness. Now, spastic cerebral palsy isn’t the only type of cerebral palsy that we can manage by using medications. So for dyskinetic cerebral
palsy, where the main problem is too much movement, the
problem again is that the muscles are just too active. But this time we don’t
manage the problem by using medications at the site
of the muscle like we did with spastic cerebral palsy. Instead we manage the
problem by using medications that work on the control
center, the brain. So whereas before we used botox injections in specific spastic muscles that we knew to be really stiff, with
dyskinetic cerebral palsy we kind of have to tone down the activity of all of the muscles, the whole system. We can’t just treat one
area or one muscle group like we can with spastic cerebral palsy. So to have this global full body effect we use a medication
called an anticholinergic. So this helps reduce
those extra movements that someone with dyskinetic
cerebral palsy experiences. Because remember, acetylcholine
is one of the chemicals that’s required to make
movements of our muscles. And an anticholinergic is
going to reduce the activity of acetylcholine at all
places in your body, right? Anticholinergic; so less movement. Now you might remember that there’s also a third type of cerebral palsy. Ataxic cerebral palsy, where the person is really shaky and unstable on their feet. Now, with this type of cerebral palsy we don’t really have a
medication that can help with the shakiness or the instability, but it’s not uncommon for people
with ataxic cerebral palsy to also have spastic cerebral palsy, or dyskinetic cerebral palsy. So sometimes people with
ataxic cerebral palsy may also be on some of these medications to help with their spasticity
or their dyskinesia. So as we move down our
severity spectrum here we often need to add a few more things to our management plan. So while we’re on the
topic of medications, one problem that can arise
is that this spasticity, this muscle stiffness, can often be worse or more widespread in
someone who’s further down our severity spectrum here. So when this is the case sometimes botox isn’t enough to deal
with their spasticity. Remember, with botox we need to inject it straight into that muscle that’s effected, because botox does not
like to travel very far. But if we have too many effected muscles that’s a lot of botox injections. So when spasticity is too widespread to be managed by botox alone, we need something else that can act in a more
widespread kind of way. So we actually have a
medication called baclofen that comes in and blocks the activity of the neurons in the
brain that are ultimately responsible for that
increased muscle activity that causes stiffness. So we can induce some
global muscle relaxation with this medication. Now, as we’ve moved down our spectrum here you can see that crutches
or maybe wheelchairs might be needed to help the person with cerebral palsy get around, because some parts of the body might be too stiff or maybe too shaky for them to get around without some extra support. And one thing that we need to look out for when this is the case
is we need to make sure that any muscles that
aren’t being used as much as they normally would, we
don’t want those muscles getting too weak, or stuck or
twisted in abnormal positions. Because when this is left over time it can lead to joint
dislocations that can cause muscle, tendon, or bone
damage that might require surgery later on to fix. So an important part of
managing cerebral palsy, and this is true across
our whole spectrum here and across the different
types of cerebral palsy, is making sure that those effected muscles are used and stretched as much as possible to try to prevent damage from disuse or abnormal positions later on. And actually, most people
with cerebral palsy, regardless of where they
fall on the spectrum, will attend regular physiotherapy to keep their muscles
as healthy as possible. So if we head down to the
far end of our spectrum here this is where we might
see the need for surgery to correct for problems that can occur when the muscles are very stiff and joints like the hip can become damaged from the legs being in abnormal positions that put strain on the joint. Sometimes surgery is also
used to try to lengthen those muscles and tendons
that have been shortened because the muscles are
so stiff and contracted. So at the end of this spectrum there are some other
problems that can crop up that might also need to be managed. So sometimes the muscles in
the mouth and the throat, that are really important
for eating and swallowing, well these muscles can
also become really stiff and this can make it
really hard for the person to eat normally, so they
might need a feeding tube to make sure that they’re
getting all of the nutrients that they need. They might also have trouble
closing their mouth properly, and controlling their saliva
because the facial muscles can become really stiff. So drooling may become
a problem that needs to be managed with medications
like botox injections into the effected muscles. And remember, right now
we’re talking about people that are a bit further
down our spectrum here. This isn’t what happens for
everyone with cerebral palsy. And remember that cerebral
palsy is ultimately caused by damage to movement
centers in the brain. So sometimes this damage
can lead to other disorders like epilepsy, which
is where the person has recurrent seizures. And this is actually
really common in people with cerebral palsy. About half of people with cerebral palsy also have epilepsy. So we would need to manage other disorders like epilepsy with its own medications. So for epilepsy these
medications are called anticonvulsants. So these are some of the
ways that we can work to manage cerebral palsy,
and management will sort of be tailored to
where a person might be on this spectrum.