• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 24
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 41
  • 41
  • 41
  • 9
  • 8
  • 6
  • 6
  • 6
  • 6
  • 5
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Affecting factors on reliability of intra-operative somatosensory evoked potentials monitoring

Leung, Nga-man, Julia., 梁雅雯. January 2007 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Medical Sciences / Master / Master of Medical Sciences
2

Fast signal extraction of somatosensory evoked potentials for intraoperative spinal cord monitoring

Liu, Hongtao, 刘洪涛 January 2010 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Orthopaedics and Traumatology / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
3

Affecting factors on reliability of intra-operative somatosensory evoked potentials monitoring /

Leung, Nga-man, Julia. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M. Med. Sc.)--University of Hong Kong, 2007.
4

Temporal and spatial dependency of high frequency wave collisions in rat somatosensory cortex

Carvajal, Alexander, January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S. in neuroscience)--Washington State University, August 2008. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 22-29).
5

Factors influencing the analgesic effects and clinical efficacy of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS)

Johnson, Mark Ian January 1991 (has links)
Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) is a simple, non-invasive technique used in the control of chronic pain. Despite the success of TENS and its continued use for over twenty years, some patients either fail to respond or show only a partial response. Furthermore some patients respond initially to TENS but then become tolerant to its analgesic effects. The reasons for poor response to TENS are unknown; different clinics report widely differing success rates, and information on long-term efficacy is sparse. Furthermore, TENS is still administered on an empirical basis in which the patient determines by trial and error the most appropriate stimulator settings (i. e. electrical characteristics of TENS) to treat his or her particular pain. It is impossible to predict whether an individual patient will respond to TENS or which stimulator settings will be optimal. In an attempt to elucidate these problems, the clinical, electrophysiological, neuropharmacological, psychological and sociological factors that influence the analgesic effects and clinical efficacy of TENS have been examined in this thesis. Three clinical studies were performed. The first (Study 2.1) reviewed the use of TENS since its introduction to Newcastle Pain Relief Clinic in 1979. It was found that 1582 patients have been given a trial of TENS of which 927 (58.6%) continue to use a stimulator on a long-term basis (Study 2.1). The clinical use of TENS by 179 of these patients was examined in-depth (Study 2.2). Although previous literature suggests that TENS is most efficacious for pains of neurogenic (neuropathic) origin, it was found that any type of pain may respond. No relationships were found to exist between the electrical characteristics of TENS (i. e. stimulator settings) used by patients during TENS treatment and the cause and site of pain. However, patients utilised specific pulse frequencies and patterns and consistently used these settings on subsequent treatment sessions (Study 2.3). These clinical studies showed that in this population, 41.4% of patients failed to respond to TENS and half using TENS on a long-term basis achieved less than 50% relief of pain. Thus, a systematic investigation to determine optimal electrical characteristics of TENS was performed. Three experiments were undertaken to examine separately the analgesic effects of different electrical characteristics of TENS (pulse frequency, pulse pattern and stimulation mode) on cold-pressor pain in healthy subjects. The effects of a range of Long Abstract pulse frequencies (10Hz to 160Hz) applied to produce a 'strong but comfortable' electrical paraesthesia within the painful site were measured (Exp. 3.1). It was found that frequencies between 20-80Hz were most effective. However, no differential effects were observed between a range of pulse patterns (continuous, burst, modulation, random; Exp. 3.2). When TENS was applied in burst mode at an intensity sufficient to produce phasic muscle twitches at a site distant yet myotomally related to the site of pain (acupuncture-like TENS) a powerful analgesic effect was observed during and post-stimulation (Exp. 3.3). It is suggested that continuous mode stimulation at 80Hz, producing a 'strong but comfortable' electrical paraesthesia within the painful site, should be the primary TENS treatment choice in the clinic but that in selected cases AL-TENS may be more effective. A number of improvements in stimulator design are suggested. Further experiments were aimed at elucidating the mechanism of TENS effects by investigating the influence of TENS on electrophysiological and neuropharmacological variables. It was found that TENS reduced peak-to-peak amplitudes of the late waveform components (N1P2) of somatosensory evoked potentials (Exp. 4.1) and increased alpha, beta and theta activity of spontaneous EEG in healthy subjects (Exp. 4.2) and/or pain patients (Exp. 4.3). As TENS produced changes in SEPs elicited from non-painful stimuli, and also changes in spontaneous EEG in pain-free subjects, it is suggested that the effects of TENS may be due in part to changes in sensory processing at several levels in the nervous system which may not specific for the perception of pain. The surprising finding that TENS increased peripheral circulating met-enkephalin in chronic pain patients was attributed to a stress-like release although this observation remains to be confirmed using a larger population sample (Exp. 5.1). The results of these experiments suggest that baseline electrophysiological and neuropharmacological variables may be important determinants of individual response to TENS. Thus, a prospective investigation was undertaken on 29 patients who were undergoing a trial of TENS to control chronic pain, in an attempt to identify predictors of patient response. Patient response to TENS was related to baseline SEP amplitudes and spontaneous EEG but was not related to biochemical, psycho-social, personality or pain related factors (Exp. 6.1). Thus, patients with small peak-to-peak amplitudes of the SEP, and low power spectrum of spontaneous EEG showed poor response to TENS (Exp. 6.1). It is suggested that an individual's intrinsic central response pattern to external stimuli may influence response to TENS.
6

Dynamics of transient and steady-state responses evoked by mechanical stimulation of the digits /

Gaetz, William C. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) -- McMaster University, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 90-105). Also available via World Wide Web.
7

Temporal dynamics of neural coding in rat SI /

Garabedian, Catherine. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, San Francisco, 2004. / includes bibliographical references. Also available online.
8

Predictability of the target stimulus for sensory-guided movement modulates somatosensory cortical potentials /

Legon, Wynn. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.Sc.)--York University, 2005. Graduate Programme in Kinesiology and Health Science. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 72-82). Also available on the Internet. MODE OF ACCESS via web browser by entering the following URL: http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url%5Fver=Z39.88-2004&res%5Fdat=xri:pqdiss &rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:MR11836
9

Eliminação de artefatos de estímulo em potenciais evocados somatossensitivos. / Removal of stimulus artifact in somatosensory evoked potentials.

Oyama, Alberto Mitsuo 09 November 2010 (has links)
Os potenciais evocados têm uma consagrada utilização em clínica. Sua obtenção é dificultada pela presença de outros sinais biológicos, de artefatos de movimento, de ruído eletrônico, de interferência da rede elétrica e de artefatos de estímulo. A média síncrona ou promediação é um método que elimina os sinais que não estejam sincronizados com a estimulação, incluindo os outros sinais biológicos, os artefatos de movimento, o ruído e a interferência. No entanto, esse método não consegue eliminar os artefatos de estímulo. Outros métodos devem ser usados para essa tarefa. Para esses métodos, a eliminação do artefato de estímulo é bem sucedida quando o artefato não se sobrepõe ao potencial evocado. Porém, para uma captação próxima ao local de estimulação, a sobreposição ocorre e dificulta a eliminação do artefato de estímulo. O objetivo deste trabalho foi o de estudar a variação da amplitude e latência do pico do potencial evocado e sua influência nas estimativas da amplitude, da latência e do erro quadrático médio. Para potenciais evocados em que houve sobreposição com o artefato, o erro médio quadrático sempre foi reduzido com a remoção do artefato de estímulo. O erro de medição da latência foi reduzido a praticamente zero, independentemente da amplitude do potencial evocado. Por outro lado, o método inseriu erro na medição da amplitude de potenciais evocados grandes. Por isso, nesse caso específico de atraso pequeno e amplitude grande, a medição da amplitude deve ser feita diretamente no sinal antes da remoção do artefato de estímulo. Comparando a ocorrência de sobreposição com os locais de captação do potencial evocado, pode-se afirmar que, para o modelo de artefato de estímulo usado neste trabalho, a necessidade de se aplicar o procedimento de remoção de artefato se restringiu aos potenciais evocados captados no cotovelo, para estimulação do nervo mediano tanto no punho quanto na mão. / Evoked potentials have been used in clinics. Their measurement is hindered by the presence of other biological signals, movement artifacts, electronic noise, power-line interference, and stimulus artifacts. Synchronous averaging is a method that eliminates the signals that are not synchronized with the stimulation, including other biological signals, movement artifacts, noise and interference. However, this method fails to eliminate stimulus artifacts. Other methods must be used in this task. Using these methods, one can obtain success in the stimulus artifact elimination, whenever the artifact does not superimpose with the evoked potential. Nevertheless, for a measurement close to the stimulation site, the superimposition is a fact that hinders the elimination of the stimulus artifact. The objective of this Masters thesis was to study the variation of the amplitude and latency of an evoked potential and verify their influence on the amplitude and latency estimates, as well as on the mean square error. For evoked potentials in which there was superposition, the mean square error was always reduced by the removal of the stimulus artifact. Latency measurement errors were reduced to zero, regardless of the evoked potential amplitude. However, this method inserted amplitude measurement errors for large evoked potentials. So, in the case of short delays and large amplitudes, amplitude measurements should be performed directly on the signal, before stimulus artifact removal. By comparing the presence of superposition with the evoked potential recording sites, one may state that, for the stimulus artifact model used in this work, the need to apply the artifact removal procedure was restricted to the evoked potentials recorded on the elbow, for median nerve stimulation both on wrist and hand.
10

Eliminação de artefatos de estímulo em potenciais evocados somatossensitivos. / Removal of stimulus artifact in somatosensory evoked potentials.

Alberto Mitsuo Oyama 09 November 2010 (has links)
Os potenciais evocados têm uma consagrada utilização em clínica. Sua obtenção é dificultada pela presença de outros sinais biológicos, de artefatos de movimento, de ruído eletrônico, de interferência da rede elétrica e de artefatos de estímulo. A média síncrona ou promediação é um método que elimina os sinais que não estejam sincronizados com a estimulação, incluindo os outros sinais biológicos, os artefatos de movimento, o ruído e a interferência. No entanto, esse método não consegue eliminar os artefatos de estímulo. Outros métodos devem ser usados para essa tarefa. Para esses métodos, a eliminação do artefato de estímulo é bem sucedida quando o artefato não se sobrepõe ao potencial evocado. Porém, para uma captação próxima ao local de estimulação, a sobreposição ocorre e dificulta a eliminação do artefato de estímulo. O objetivo deste trabalho foi o de estudar a variação da amplitude e latência do pico do potencial evocado e sua influência nas estimativas da amplitude, da latência e do erro quadrático médio. Para potenciais evocados em que houve sobreposição com o artefato, o erro médio quadrático sempre foi reduzido com a remoção do artefato de estímulo. O erro de medição da latência foi reduzido a praticamente zero, independentemente da amplitude do potencial evocado. Por outro lado, o método inseriu erro na medição da amplitude de potenciais evocados grandes. Por isso, nesse caso específico de atraso pequeno e amplitude grande, a medição da amplitude deve ser feita diretamente no sinal antes da remoção do artefato de estímulo. Comparando a ocorrência de sobreposição com os locais de captação do potencial evocado, pode-se afirmar que, para o modelo de artefato de estímulo usado neste trabalho, a necessidade de se aplicar o procedimento de remoção de artefato se restringiu aos potenciais evocados captados no cotovelo, para estimulação do nervo mediano tanto no punho quanto na mão. / Evoked potentials have been used in clinics. Their measurement is hindered by the presence of other biological signals, movement artifacts, electronic noise, power-line interference, and stimulus artifacts. Synchronous averaging is a method that eliminates the signals that are not synchronized with the stimulation, including other biological signals, movement artifacts, noise and interference. However, this method fails to eliminate stimulus artifacts. Other methods must be used in this task. Using these methods, one can obtain success in the stimulus artifact elimination, whenever the artifact does not superimpose with the evoked potential. Nevertheless, for a measurement close to the stimulation site, the superimposition is a fact that hinders the elimination of the stimulus artifact. The objective of this Masters thesis was to study the variation of the amplitude and latency of an evoked potential and verify their influence on the amplitude and latency estimates, as well as on the mean square error. For evoked potentials in which there was superposition, the mean square error was always reduced by the removal of the stimulus artifact. Latency measurement errors were reduced to zero, regardless of the evoked potential amplitude. However, this method inserted amplitude measurement errors for large evoked potentials. So, in the case of short delays and large amplitudes, amplitude measurements should be performed directly on the signal, before stimulus artifact removal. By comparing the presence of superposition with the evoked potential recording sites, one may state that, for the stimulus artifact model used in this work, the need to apply the artifact removal procedure was restricted to the evoked potentials recorded on the elbow, for median nerve stimulation both on wrist and hand.

Page generated in 0.1679 seconds