User Login
Forgot your password? Click Here.
Playlist
What are playlists? Click Here.



This program covers the causes, symptoms, and range of possible treatments of cerebral palsy, including the relationship between physical and mental handicaps, and the role of medications and physical therapy in treatment. Animation illustrates the area of the brain damaged in patients with cerebral palsy; the medical director of the United Cerebral Palsy Association lists such causes as maternal infections during pregnancy, complications during childbirth, and infant head injuries; and selective posterior rhizotomy surgery is examined as a means of easing spasticity in certain types of patients. (19 minutes)



 
    

Item#: This title is currently not available.
Copyright date: ©1991




     


Not available to Home Video and Hospital customers.




Without Pity: A Film about Abilities

"Disabled people are tired of being invisible, and are declaring their right to an equal chance at life." -Christopher Reeve This HBO documentary, narrated by Christopher Reeve, celebrates the efforts of people with disabilities to live full, produ...(more details)
 
Autism: The Child Who Couldn't Play

This program is a comprehensive overview of autism, the mysterious disorder that impedes normal child development. It was once believed that autism was caused by remote, cold parents; most often the mother was blamed. The program explores the frontie...(more details)
 
The Injured Brain: Closed Head Trauma

This program explains the types and symptoms of closed head injuries-anything from temporary loss of consciousness to coma-though some patients show almost no symptoms. It shows the tests used to determine the nature and extent of the injury, treatme...(more details)
 
Epilepsy: Breaking the Barrier

This program profiles a man afflicted with epilepsy, along with his family, coping with the disease. The program shows how people afflicted with epilepsy can lead normal lives, and explains the different types of epileptic seizures and which are most...(more details)
 
Cystic Fibrosis

Cystic fibrosis is the most common genetic killer. In the past, most children with the disease died by the age of 20; today a variety of antibiotics are helping some to live into their 40s. Progress is also being made on creating a genetic test for p...(more details)
 


See additional titles in Human Anatomy & Physiology | Diseases, Disorders & Disabilities