Long-Term therapeutic effects of Katona therapy in moderate-to-severe perinatal brain damage
Manuel Hinojosa-Rodriguez, Jose Oliver De Leo-Jimenez, Maria Elena, Juarez-Colin, Eduardo Gonzalez-Moreira, Carlos Sair Flores-Bautista and, Thalia Harmony

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that Katona therapy, when applied early, significantly improves long-term motor outcomes in children with moderate-to-severe perinatal brain damage, highlighting its therapeutic benefits.
Contribution
It provides evidence of the long-term efficacy of Katona therapy in improving motor function in PBD patients, using comprehensive evaluations and clustering analysis.
Findings
Katona therapy improves motor performance in PBD children.
Most treated children cluster with healthy controls in MEPs and evaluations.
Early rehabilitation reduces severity of motor disability in later life.
Abstract
Aim: To determine the long-term efficacy of Katona therapy and early rehabilitation of infants with moderate-to-severe perinatal brain damage (PBD). Methods: Thirty-two participants were recruited (7-to-16 years) and divided into 3 groups: one Healthy group (n = 11), one group with PBD treated with Katona methodology from 2 months of corrected age, and with long-term follow-up (n = 12), and one group with PBD but without treatment in the first year of life due to late diagnosis of PBD (n = 9). Neuropediatric evaluations, motor evoked potentials (MEPs) and magnetic resonance images (MRI) were made. The PBD groups were matched by severity and topography of lesion. Results: The patients treated with Katona had better motor performance when compared to patients without early treatment (Gross Motor Function Classification System levels; 75% of Katona group were classified in levels I and II…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeonatal and fetal brain pathology · Infant Development and Preterm Care · Cerebral Palsy and Movement Disorders
