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Virtual Maney — Spinal Cord Injury |
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The featured articles are just a selection of the wide variety of cutting-edge research published in our journals. To learn more about the individual journals in the Health Sciences Collection, and about conferences at which we shall be exhibiting, please visit our Health Sciences Spotlight. ASCIP members: Members of ASCIP have exclusive, continuous access to this virtual resource. To access Virtual Maney - Spinal Cord Injury, visit the members area of the ASCIP website and follow the link from there. Others: Please complete the form below for a free trial of this virtual journal for 30 days. By submitting your details in this form you agree to join our spinal cord injury mailing list. We do not pass data onto third parties. Free 30 day trial Please note: if referencing any of the articles that appear in this virtual journal, please cite the original source publication. Follow the links below to find out more about the journals contributing to Virtual Maney - Spinal Cord Injury. • Physical Therapy Reviews |
Contents Orthopaedic manual physical therapy • Electrical stimulation for enhancing strength and related characteristics of human denervated skeletal muscle • Video capture virtual reality: A decade of rehabilitation assessment and intervention • Clinical significance testing in rehabilitation research: what, why, and how? • Clustered clinical findings for diagnosis of cervical spine myelopathy • Prevalence of classification methods for patients with lumbar impairments using the McKenzie syndromes, pain pattern, manipulation, and stabilization clinical prediction rules • Identifying myelopathy caused by thoracic syringomyelia: A case report Neurology • Adaptive changes in the injured spinal cord and their role in promoting functional recovery • Standardized assessment of walking capacity after spinal cord injury: the European network approach • Foot control in incomplete SCI: distinction between paresis and dexterity • Stem and progenitor cell therapies: recent progress for spinal cord injury repair • Characteristics of the locomotor-like muscle activity during orthotic gait in paraplegic persons • Walking performance, medical outcomes and patient training in FES of innervated muscles for ambulation by thoracic-level complete paraplegics • Motor cortex changes in spinal cord injury: a TMS study • Non-invasive physiological monitoring of exercise and fitness • One year of home-based daily FES in complete lower motor neuron paraplegia: recovery of tetanic contractility drives the structural improvements of denervated muscle |