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Cold feet in children with neurological disorders

Abstract
These studies focused on presence of cold feet in children with neurological disorders and raised the questions: Does acupuncture affect skin temperature? Are cold feet a general symptom in children with neurological disorders? Are cold feet associated with other symptoms? What are the moods, health, and daily life experiences of these children’s parents? Study I assessed effects of acupuncture on skin temperature in children with neurological disorders. The study was of pilot character, to determine if further investigation in a larger, well-characterised group could be worthwhile. Study II analysed skin temperature variation between pre-school children with and without neurological disorders to determine if skin temperature and walking ability were correlated. Study III investigated accompanying symptoms, such as cold extremities, constipation, pain, sleeping disorders, and well-being, and their treatment to determine (i) whether cold extremities is a general problem, (ii) what symptom treatment the children had received, (iii) associations between cold extremities and gross-motor function, and (iv) associations between cold extremities and other symptoms borne by the child. Study IV described mood, health, and daily life experiences of the children’s parents to investigate (i) impact that the child’s impairments and symptoms have on the family and (ii) community services support. Study I (single subject design; each child was its own control) comprised 6 children with neurological disorders. Study II (hypothesis refinement study) comprised 25 healthy children recruited from a community pre-school and 15 children with cerebral or spinal cord disorders from Child and youth neurohabilitation in Örnsköldsvik. Studies III and IV (postal survey, descriptive hypothesis-generating studies) comprised 107 children with cerebral palsy (Study III) and parents of 106 of these (Study IV) from 8 habilitation centres in the northern region of Sweden. Conclusions: · Acupuncture may increase skin temperature in some children with neurological disorders and cold extremities. · Non-walking children with cerebral damage had significantly lower mean hand and foot skin temperature compared to healthy controls. · Of the 5 symptoms – cold extremities, pain, sleeping disorders, constipation, and impaired well-being – (i) most of the children with CP had had 1 or several symptoms for more than 1 year and (ii) symptom frequency was generally higher in non-walking children than in walkers. Of the children who had had symptoms for more than 1 year, a surprisingly large number had received no treatment for them. · Care-giving for a child with CP may affect parents’ moods, health, and daily living – especially if the child has several impairments and symptoms. Frequent parental anxiousness regarding the child’s physical and psychological health might be associated with affected parental health.
Parts of work
I. Svedberg, LE., Nordahl, G.,Lundeberg, T. (2001). Effects of acupuncture on skin temperature in children with neurological disorders and cold feet: an exploratory study.Complementary Therapies in Medicine 9:89-97. ::pmid::11444888
 
II. Svedberg, LE., Stener-Victorin, E., Nordahl, G.,Lundeberg, T. (2005). Skin temperature in the extremities of healthy and neurologically impaired children. European Journal of Paediatric Neurology 9(5):347-54. ::pmid::16061412
 
III. Svedberg, LE., Englund, E., Malker, H., Stener-Victorin, E. (2007). Parental perception of cold extremities and other accompanying symptoms in children with cerebral palsy. European Journal of Paediatric Neurology 12(2):89-96. ::pmid::17662628
 
IV. Svedberg, LE., Englund, E., Malker, H., Stener-Victorin, E. (2009). Comparison of impact on mood, health, and daily living experiences of primary caregivers of walking and non-walking children with cerebral palsy and provided community services support. Europeen Journal of Paediatric Neurology Jul 21. [Epub ahead of print] ::pmid::19628416
 
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology. Department of Clinical Neuroscience and Rehabilitation
Disputation
Fredagen den 2 oktober 2009, kl 13.00, Hörsal 2119, Arvid Wallgrens backe, hus 2, Göteborg
Date of defence
2009-10-02
E-mail
lena.svedberg@fhs.gu.se
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/21042
Collections
  • Doctoral Theses / Doktorsavhandlingar Institutionen för neurovetenskap och fysiologi
  • Doctoral Theses from Sahlgrenska Academy
  • Doctoral Theses from University of Gothenburg / Doktorsavhandlingar från Göteborgs universitet
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Abstract (946.7Kb)
Thesis frame (923.5Kb)
Date
2009-09-11
Author
Svedberg, Lena
Keywords
Skin temperature
Acupuncture
Autonomic dysfunction
Cerebral palsy
Spinal cord disorders
Pain
Constipation
Well-being
Parental health
Parental mood
Restricted time
Services support
Sleeping disorders
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-7856-6
Language
eng
Metadata
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