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"Tae Sik Yoon"

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"Tae Sik Yoon"

Original Articles
Risk Factor of Visuospatial Neglect: A Study of Association Between Visuospatial Neglect and Anemia
Ho Jeong Kim, Tae Sik Yoon, Soo Jeong Han
Ann Rehabil Med 2013;37(5):611-618.   Published online October 29, 2013
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5535/arm.2013.37.5.611
Objective

To investigate the correlation between visuospatial neglect and anemia in patients with right cerebral infarction, as well as to identify the risk factor of neglect and furnish preliminary data on rehabilitation management.

Methods

The line bisection test and Albert test were conducted on subjects with right cerebral infarction in order to analyze neglect severity. Multiple linear regression analysis was conducted to investigate correlation between neglect severity and hemoglobin and hematocrit level. Logistic regression analysis was applied to identify the risk factor of neglect.

Results

Visuospatial neglect was observed in 33 subjects out of 124. Hemoglobin and hematocrit were not directly correlated with visuospatial neglect severity, whereas infarct size was directly correlated. Subjects with visuospatial neglect were characterized by a large infarct size, a low score in the Mini-Mental State Examination and long hospital stay.

Conclusion

In this study, visuospatial neglect was found to be uncorrelated with anemia. It implies that emphasis should be placed on the early detection of anemia and neglect in patients with left hemiplegia, the formulation of respective therapeutic plans and improvement of prognosis. The study found that the possibility of a visuospatial neglect occurrence increases with infarct size. In this regard, it is required that visuospatial neglect was detected and treated in the earliest possible stage, notwithstanding the difficulty that lies in the precise measurement of the severity.

  • 3,862 View
  • 34 Download
Factors that Influence Quiet Standing Balance of Patients with Incomplete Cervical Spinal Cord Injuries
Ga Eun Lee, Hasuk Bae, Tae Sik Yoon, Joo Sup Kim, Tae Im Yi, Jun Sung Park
Ann Rehabil Med 2012;36(4):530-537.   Published online August 27, 2012
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5535/arm.2012.36.4.530
Objective

To investigate the factors influencing the quiet standing balance of patients with incomplete cervical spinal cord injuries. Also to find the correlations between posturographic parameters and clinical balance tests as well as to find the correlation between posturographic parameters and functional independence.

Method

We conducted a tetra-ataxiometric posturography, lower extremity motor score (LEMS), Korean version of the Berg Balance Scale (K-BBS), Timed Up and Go test (TUG), and Korean Version of the Modified Barthel Index (K-MBI) of 10 patients. 10 healthy adults carried out the posturography. We checked stability, weight distribution, Fourier and synchronization indices of eight positions, and the fall index of the posturography.

Results

The patient group showed significantly higher stability and weight distribution indices in all eight positions. Stability indices significantly increased with eyes closed or standing on pillows. Weight distribution indices were significantly higher with eyes closed or the head bent backwards. The patient group showed significantly higher Fourier indices of low, low-medium, and high frequency in eight positions. The Fourier indices at high-medium frequency were significantly higher with eyes closed on pillows or in variable head positions. There were no significant differences of synchronization indices between the patient and the control group. The falling index of the patient group significantly correlated with K-BBS, TUG, and K-MBI. LEMS had significant correlation with some synchronization indices, but not with the falling index.

Conclusion

The quiet standing balance of the patients was influenced by somatosensory limitations or insufficient visual compensation. We should try to improve the postural balance and functional independence of patients through proper proprioceptive and lower extremity strength training for better postural and pedal control, and to make efforts to minimize environmental hazards.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Methods for evaluating gait associated dynamic balance and coordination in rodents
    Akshat D. Modi, Anavi Parekh, Zeenal H. Patel
    Behavioural Brain Research.2024; 456: 114695.     CrossRef
  • The relationship between balance control and thigh muscle strength and muscle activity in persons with incomplete spinal cord injury
    Matthijs Ferdinand Wouda, Marte Fosvold Løtveit, Espen Ingvald Bengtson, Vegard Strøm
    Spinal Cord Series and Cases.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Clinical Static Balance Assessment: A Narrative Review of Traditional and IMU-Based Posturography in Older Adults and Individuals with Incomplete Spinal Cord Injury
    Alireza Noamani, Negar Riahi, Albert H. Vette, Hossein Rouhani
    Sensors.2023; 23(21): 8881.     CrossRef
  • The Effects of Surgery on Postural Instability in Patients With Cervical Compressive Myelopathy
    Toma Yano, Takashi Fujishiro, Takuya Obo, Atsushi Nakano, Yoshiharu Nakaya, Sachio Hayama, Katsunori Mori, Ichiro Baba, Masashi Neo
    Clinical Spine Surgery: A Spine Publication.2022; 35(2): E298.     CrossRef
  • Individuals with peripheral vestibulopathy and poor quality of sleep are at a higher risk for falls
    Mario Chueire de Andrade Junior, Renato Stefanini, Juliana Maria Gazzola, Fernanda Louise Martinho Haddad, Fernando Freitas Ganança
    Brazilian Journal of Otorhinolaryngology.2021; 87(4): 440.     CrossRef
  • Characterization of standing balance after incomplete spinal cord injury: Alteration in integration of sensory information in ambulatory individuals
    Alireza Noamani, Jean-François Lemay, Kristin E. Musselman, Hossein Rouhani
    Gait & Posture.2021; 83: 152.     CrossRef
  • Characterizing inter-limb synchronization after incomplete spinal cord injury: A cross-sectional study
    Olinda Habib Perez, Katherine Chan, Janelle Unger, Jae W. Lee, Kei Masani, Kristin E. Musselman
    Gait & Posture.2021; 85: 191.     CrossRef
  • Fall Prevention in Older Adults after Wearing Corrected Spectacles for Distance
    Seung Chul Park, Chae Woon Yoo, Kyu Tae Park, Young Min Lee, Sang-Yeob Kim
    Journal of Korean Ophthalmic Optics Society.2021; 26(1): 45.     CrossRef
  • Indivíduos com vestibulopatia periférica e má qualidade de sono têm risco mais elevado de quedas
    Mario Chueire de Andrade Junior, Renato Stefanini, Juliana Maria Gazzola, Fernanda Louise Martinho Haddad, Fernando Freitas Ganança
    Brazilian Journal of Otorhinolaryngology (Versão em Português).2021; 87(4): 440.     CrossRef
  • Current state of balance assessment during transferring, sitting, standing and walking activities for the spinal cord injured population: A systematic review
    Tarun Arora, Alison Oates, Kaylea Lynd, Kristin E. Musselman
    The Journal of Spinal Cord Medicine.2020; 43(1): 10.     CrossRef
  • Outcomes following an adaptive rock climbing program in a person with an incomplete spinal cord injury: A case report
    Brittany DelGrande, Carrin LaCoppola, Gabriele Moriello, Kerrianne Sanicola
    Physiotherapy Theory and Practice.2020; 36(12): 1466.     CrossRef
  • Role of Virtual Reality in Balance Training in Patients with Spinal Cord Injury: A Prospective Comparative Pre-Post Study
    Madhusree Sengupta, Anupam Gupta, Meeka Khanna, U. K. Rashmi Krishnan, Dhritiman Chakrabarti
    Asian Spine Journal.2020; 14(1): 51.     CrossRef
  • Development and validation of the Standing Balance Assessment for Individuals with Spinal Cord Injury (SBASCI) - A new outcome measure
    Meenakshi Singh, Aparna Sarkar, Chitra Kataria
    NeuroRehabilitation.2020; 47(2): 161.     CrossRef
  • Postural control strategy after incomplete spinal cord injury: effect of sensory inputs on trunk–leg movement coordination
    Alireza Noamani, Jean-François Lemay, Kristin E. Musselman, Hossein Rouhani
    Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation.2020;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Attentional requirements of postural control in people with spinal cord injury: the effect of dual task
    C M Tse, M G Carpenter, T Liu-Ambrose, A E Chisholm, T Lam
    Spinal Cord.2017; 55(10): 915.     CrossRef
  • Postural control during gait initiation and termination of adults with incomplete spinal cord injury
    Jean-François Lemay, Cyril Duclos, Sylvie Nadeau, Dany H. Gagnon
    Human Movement Science.2015; 41: 20.     CrossRef
  • Reliability of Single Leg Balance Test Using Posturography
    Tae Im Yi, Yeon Kang, Yoon Soo Lee
    The Korean Journal of Sports Medicine.2014; 32(2): 120.     CrossRef
  • Recovery Process of Standing Postural Control in Hemiplegia after Stroke
    Ryuzo Yanohara, Toshio Teranishi, Yutaka Tomita, Genichi Tanino, Yoshiya Ueno, Shigeru Sonoda
    Journal of Physical Therapy Science.2014; 26(11): 1761.     CrossRef
  • 5,714 View
  • 79 Download
  • 18 Crossref
Factors Affecting Test Results and Standardized Method in Quiet Standing Balance Evaluation
Jung Joong Yoon, Tae Sik Yoon, Bo Mi Shin, Eun Hye Na
Ann Rehabil Med 2012;36(1):112-118.   Published online February 29, 2012
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5535/arm.2012.36.1.112
Objective

To identify factors affecting test results of the quiet standing balance evaluation conducted by posturography and to investigate the standardized method by comparing results according to feet width.

Method

The study cohort consisted of 100 healthy individuals. We assessed the quiet standing balance of subjects by using 3 different methods: standing on a force plate with feet width the same as shoulder width (test 1); with feet width the same as half the shoulder width (test 2); with feet width determined by the subject's comfort (test 3). Subjects underwent each test with their eyes open and closed for 30 seconds each time. Parameters for measuring standing balance included the mean mediolateral and anteroposterior extent, speed, and the velocity moment of center of pressure (COP) movement.

Results

All parameters showed better results when the subject's eyes were open rather than closed, and the mean AP extent and speed increased as the age of the subjects increased (p<0.01). However, there was no significant correlation between height and the study parameters, and no differences between men and women. Mean mediolateral extent and speed were significantly longer and faster in test 1 compared with tests 2 and 3 (p<0.01). The results of test 2 were better than the results of test 3, but the difference was not statistically significant.

Conclusion

COP movements increased with age and when subjects closed their eyes in an evaluation of quiet standing balance conducted by posturography. Gender and height did not affect results of the test. We suggest that an appropriate method for conducting posturography is to have the subject stand on a force plate with their feet width the same as half the shoulder width, because this posture provided relatively accurate balance capacity.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Reference values for static posturography of sportive and healthy adults aged 18–30 years
    Stephan Becker, Anna Thomas, Lilli Ulrich, Laura Becker, Carlo Dindorf, Joshua Berger, Michael Fröhlich
    BMC Sports Science, Medicine and Rehabilitation.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Effects of Acute Fatigue on Balance Control of Alpine Skiing Athlete
    Javier Riscart-López, Elena Jiménez-Herranz, Isabel Mendoza-Puente, Miguel Ángel Rosety-Rodríguez, Jorge Bastos-García, Manuel Rodríguez-Huguet, Juan José Ramos-Álvarez
    Life.2025; 15(5): 679.     CrossRef
  • International validation of meaningfulness of postural sway and gait to assess myeloneuropathy in adults with adrenoleukodystrophy
    Hemmo A. F. Yska, Bela R. Turk, Ali Fatemi, Jordan Goodman, Marije Voermans, Dan Amos, Man Amanat, Stephanie van de Stadt, Marc Engelen, Amena Smith‐Fine, Jennifer Keller
    Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease.2024; 47(6): 1336.     CrossRef
  • Walking speed and balance both improved in older Japanese adults between 1998 and 2018
    Tetsuhiro Kidokoro, Samantha J. Peterson, Hannah K. Reimer, Grant R. Tomkinson
    Journal of Exercise Science & Fitness.2021; 19(3): 204.     CrossRef
  • Functional knee stability in non-elite handball: balance and jump performance differ based on players’ position
    Alina Rühlemann, Constantin Mayer, Thomas Albrecht, Marcus Jäger
    Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy.2020; 28(4): 1212.     CrossRef
  • Postural Body Sway as Surrogate Outcome for Myelopathy in Adrenoleukodystrophy
    Wouter J. C. van Ballegoij, Stephanie I. W. van de Stadt, Irene C. Huffnagel, Stephan Kemp, Marjo S. van der Knaap, Marc Engelen
    Frontiers in Physiology.2020;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Desarrollo de un índice de equilibrio para evaluar la funcionalidad en mujeres mayores de 60 años
    A.R. Gutiérrez-Galvis, J.F. Ramírez-Villada, R.E. Argothy-Bucheli, J.F. Zea-Castro
    Fisioterapia.2018; 40(1): 4.     CrossRef
  • Short-Term Changes in Algometry, Inclinometry, Stabilometry, and Urinary pH Analysis After a Thoracolumbar Junction Manipulation in Patients with Kidney Stones
    Ángel Oliva Pascual-Vaca, Ramón Punzano-Rodríguez, Pablo Escribá-Astaburuaga, Juan Carlos Fernández-Domínguez, François Ricard, Maria Angeles Franco-Sierra, Cleofás Rodríguez-Blanco
    The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine.2017; 23(8): 639.     CrossRef
  • The risk for falls in older people in the context of objective functional studies
    Zofia Ignasiak, Anna Skrzek, Sławomir Kozieł, Teresa Sławińska, Paweł Posłuszny, Krystyna Rożek
    Anthropological Review.2015; 78(3): 337.     CrossRef
  • Evidence for a general stiffening motor control pattern in neck pain: a cross sectional study
    Ingebrigt Meisingset, Astrid Woodhouse, Ann- Katrin Stensdotter, Øyvind Stavdahl, Håvard Lorås, Sigmund Gismervik, Hege Andresen, Kristian Austreim, Ottar Vasseljen
    BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders.2015;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Reliability, validity, and effectiveness of center of pressure parameters in assessing stabilometric platform in subjects with incomplete spinal cord injury: a serial cross-sectional study
    Federica Tamburella, Giorgio Scivoletto, Marco Iosa, Marco Molinari
    Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation.2014; 11(1): 86.     CrossRef
  • Influence of gender and physical exercise on balance of healthy young adults
    Sarina Francescato Torres, Júlia Guimarães Reis, Daniela Cristina Carvalho de Abreu
    Fisioterapia em Movimento.2014; 27(3): 399.     CrossRef
  • Effects of Age and Gender on Dynamic Stability During Stair Descent
    Bih-Jen Hsue, Fong-Chin Su
    Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.2014; 95(10): 1860.     CrossRef
  • Chest Cage Angle Difference and Rotation of Main Thoracic Curve are Independent Risk Factors of Postoperative Shoulder Imbalance in Surgically Treated Patients With Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis
    Mitsuru Yagi, Masakazu Takemitsu, Masafumi Machida
    Spine.2013; 38(19): E1209.     CrossRef
  • Clavicle Chest Cage Angle Difference (CCAD)
    Mitsuru Yagi, Masakazu Takemitsu, Masafumi Machida
    Spine.2013; 38(12): E705.     CrossRef
  • 5,942 View
  • 60 Download
  • 15 Crossref
Improvement of Quiet Standing Balance in Patients with Wallenberg Syndrome after Rehabilitation
Eun Hye Na, Tae Sik Yoon, Soo Jeong Han
Ann Rehabil Med 2011;35(6):791-797.   Published online December 30, 2011
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5535/arm.2011.35.6.791
Objective

To evaluate quiet standing balance of patients with Wallenberg syndrome before and after rehabilitation.

Method

Six patients with Wallenberg syndrome were enrolled within one month after being affected by an infarct of the lateral medulla. Quiet standing balance was assessed using posturography with eyes open and closed. The assessment was repeated after the patients had undergone rehabilitation treatment for three to nine months, and the results of the two assessments were compared.

Results

The quiet standing balance evaluation was performed by measurement of center of pressure (CoP) movement. In the initial test, the mean scores of mediolateral and anteroposterior speed, velocity movement, mediolateral and anteroposterior extent of CoP were all high, indicating impairments of quiet standing balance in the patients. After rehabilitation treatment, the anteroposterior speed and extent, the mediolateral speed and extent, and velocity moment of CoP showed statistically significant reductions in the eyes open condition (p<0.05), and the anteroposterior speed and extent and velocity moment of CoP had decreased in the eyes closed condition (p<0.05). Mediolateral speed and extent of CoP in the eyes closed condition had also decreased, but the reduction was not statistically significant.

Conclusion

This study demonstrated improvements of quiet standing balance, especially anteroposterior balance, in patients with Wallenberg syndrome following rehabilitation. We suggest that balance training is important in the rehabilitation of Wallenberg syndrome and that, as an objective measure of balance status, posturography is useful in the assessment of quiet standing balance.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • From Dizziness to Dysphagia: A Complex Presentation of Lateral Medullary Syndrome
    Isabella Canut, Bilal Farooqui, Joshua Hickman
    Cureus.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Injury of the lateral vestibulospinal tract in a patient with the lateral medullary syndrome
    Sung Ho Jang, Ga Young Park, In Hee Cho, Sang Seok Yeo
    Medicine.2020; 99(37): e22117.     CrossRef
  • Lateral Medullary Syndrome Following Injury of Lateral Vestibulospinal Tract: Diffusion Tensor Imaging Study
    Sung Ho Jang, Seunghue Oh, Sang Seok Yeo
    Journal of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases.2020; 29(11): 105252.     CrossRef
  • Does total hip replacement impact on postural stability?
    Agnieszka Wareńczak, Przemysław Lisiński
    BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders.2019;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Clinical Outcomes of the Lateral Medullary Syndrome: A Case Report
    Sakine Mazaherpur, Avid Rokni, Ehsan Bastani Far, Alireza Abdi
    Iranian Red Crescent Medical Journal.2018;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Analysis of Postural Control During Quiet Standing in a Population with Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy Undergoing Moderate Intensity Aerobic Exercise Training
    Snehil Dixit, Arun Maiya, Barkur A. Shastry, Vasudev Guddattu
    American Journal of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation.2016; 95(7): 516.     CrossRef
  • 4,918 View
  • 43 Download
  • 6 Crossref
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