Rusk Rehabilitation - · PDF fileNYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER ... MS, CCC-SLP, director of...
Transcript of Rusk Rehabilitation - · PDF fileNYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER ... MS, CCC-SLP, director of...
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 550 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016
NYULANGONE.ORG
37%INCREASE IN
OUTPATIENT VISITS
TOP 10IN U.S. NEWS &
WORLD REPORT
ADVANCING VALUE BASED
MEDICINE
Rusk Rehabilitation
2016 / YEAR IN REVIEW
1 MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR
2 FACTS & FIGURES
4 NEW & NOTEWORTHY
8 TRANSLATIONAL CLINICAL CARE
9 Rehabilitation’s Role in Value Based Medicine
12 Novel Treatment for Post-Stroke Muscle Stiffness
14 Rehabilitation Following Groundbreaking Face Transplant
16 Neuromodulation to Treat Shoulder Pain
18 Early Mobilization in the PICU
20 Brain Injury Research
23 Complex Case: NSTEMI Patient
24 ACADEMIC ACTIVITIES
29 LOCATIONS
30 LEADERSHIP
Contents
Produced by the Office of Communications and Marketing, NYU Langone Medical Center Writer: Robert Fojut Design: Ideas On Purpose, www.ideasonpurpose.com Photography: Maria Aufmuth/TED; Karsten Moran Printing: Allied Printing Services, Inc.
On the cover: Micro image of muscle fibers
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 1
Message from the Chair
STEVEN R. FLANAGAN, MD
Howard A. Rusk Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Chair, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine
Medical Director, Rusk Rehabilitation
Dear Colleagues and Friends:
I am pleased to share with you the 2016 “Year in Review” from Rusk Rehabilitation. Our annual report highlights some of our team’s most significant achievements this year.
In today’s world of healthcare reform, we can’t talk about any kind of achievement without asking two questions. First, did we improve patient outcomes? Second, did we control costs? These two issues define the essence of value-based care. At Rusk, we are focusing all our efforts on increasing the value of the care we provide. Our goal is to achieve better outcomes while lowering total costs.
What are we doing to increase healthcare value? For one, we have helped pioneer a strategy that is delivering significant savings—early, intensive rehabilitation in critical care. Last year, our early mobilization initiative in the adult ICU reduced length of stay (LOS) and increased home discharge rates. In 2016, we expanded early mobilization to the pediatric ICU, where we look forward to achieving similar gains. We also took steps this year to ensure that ICU patients receive a physiatry consult early in their stay. This initiative has helped ensure that patients receive appropriate rehabilitation services more quickly. As a result, we have dramatically decreased LOS in acute rehabilitation while maintaining outcomes.
While we improve the way we deliver care, Rusk researchers are continuing to investigate new treatments. One major area of interest is stroke. In 2016, Rusk faculty demonstrated that a long-available drug therapy can effectively reduce muscle stiffness in post-stroke patients. Their research generated a great deal of interest, and we are working to disseminate this promising therapy to other institutions. Our investigators are also very active in the area of brain injury. This year, they developed several new tools for detecting and assessing brain injury and honed new strategies for delivering the most effective rehabilitative care to TBI patients.
I can’t conclude this note without mentioning a major milestone for NYU Langone Medical Center and a significant achievement for the entire rehabilitation team at Rusk. One year ago, the recipient of the most extensive face transplant to date was discharged from NYU Langone. After his surgery and in the months that followed, our physical and occupational therapists, speech language pathologists, and physiatrists worked tirelessly to help him achieve rehabilitation goals far beyond what most patients ever confront. This team’s work broke new ground in our field—and demonstrated the key role of rehabilitation in the healthcare system of the future.
I am very proud of the entire faculty and staff of Rusk Rehabilitation. It’s my firm belief that healthcare reform will not be as successful as it can be without the involvement of rehabilitation medicine. And the people I work with every day here at Rusk are the ones who are creating that success.
Thank you for your interest in our work. On behalf of all my colleagues, I look forward to the great things that every one of us in the field of rehabilitation medicine will achieve in the years to come.
Facts & Figures
2 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
Rusk Rehabilitation
Numbers represent FY16 (Sept 2015–Aug 2016) unless otherwise noted
TOP 10IN THE COUNTRY
for rehabilitation in U.S. News & World Report’s
“Best Hospitals” since the rankings began in 1989
AACVPRPROGRAM CERTIFICATION
for Rusk’s Joan and Joel Smilow Cardiac Prevention and Rehabilitation Center
3-YEAR CARF ACCREDITATION
granted in 2016 CIIRP, Pediatrics, Brain Injury, Stroke, and Limb Loss; Exemplary conformance in research and community outreach
Accolades
89CERTIFIED SPECIALIST PHYSICAL THERAPISTS
accounting for 10% of all certified specialists in the state of New York
36CERTIFIED REHABILITATION REGISTERED NURSES (CRRN)
including two CRRN-certified nurse managers
23PM&R CHAIRS
around the U.S., both current and former, who have graduated from Rusk’s residency program
$6.5MTOTAL FUNDED RESEARCH
Clinical Education and Research
261,000+OUTPATIENT VISITS
a 37% increase compared with last year
2,100+INPATIENT DISCHARGES
30,000+DOWNLOADS OF RUSK INSIGHTS
podcast via iTunes and other podcast apps
Facts & Figures
NYU Langone Medical Center
# 10IN THE NATION BEST HOSPITALS
and nationally ranked in 12 specialties, including top 10 rankings in Orthopaedics, Geriatrics, Neurology & Neurosurgery, Rheumatology, Rehabilitation, Cardiology & Heart Surgery, and Urology. Nationally ranked in Cancer, Diabetes & Endocrinology, Ear, Nose & Throat, Gastroenterology & GI Surgery, and Pulmonology
# 11IN THE NATION BEST MEDICAL SCHOOLS FOR RESEARCH
and a leader in innovation in medical education, including accelerated pathways to the MD degree
LEADERIN QUALITY CARE AND PATIENT SAFETY
and recognized for superior performance as measured by Vizient’s nationwide 2016 Quality and Accountability Study
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 3
4 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
New & Noteworthy
New Clinical Programs, Education Initiatives, and Platforms for Experts
Rusk on the TED Stage
Holly A. Cohen, OTR/L, ATP, SCEM, CDRS, assistive technology program manager, has a passion for helping people with disabilities use technology to make their world more accessible. In 2016, she shared that passion at the prestigious TED Conference. This year’s event featured cultural leaders such as Al Gore and John Legend, and the audience included innovators like Bill Gates and Steven Spielberg. During her session,
Cohen pointed out that there is one area of activity that people do not often think about in terms of accessibility—play. Cohen explained how she helps children and their families modify commercial toys using DIY tools such as 3D printers, laser cutters, and inexpensive electronics. For example, to play with a remote control car, a child must be able to work the controller. But what if she can’t use her hands?
Cohen described a 25-cent part that lets you add hundreds of different accessibility switches. What about more complex toys like video games? Cohen and a colleague adapted a PlayStation for a teen with muscular dystrophy who can move only his head and one finger. The key is to focus on abilities. “Build for what they can do,” she says, “not for what they can’t do.”
Holly Cohen, OTR/L, ATP, SCEM, CDRS
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 5
New Program Provides Intensive Speech Language Therapy for Stroke Survivors
In early 2017, Rusk is launching its Intensive Comprehensive Aphasia Program (ICAP), which offers concentrated speech therapy for stroke survivors. The program was developed by Mary R. Reilly, MS, CCC-SLP, director of speech language pathology, and Elizabeth E. Galletta, PhD, CCC-SLP, clinical research specialist. “Research in neuroplasticity has demonstrated that stroke survivors who have a language impairment can benefit from intensive
therapy,” explains Dr. Galletta. “Our intensive three-week program uses a variety of evidence-based treatment approaches that directly target both the impairment itself and the activity of communicating.” Individual therapy sessions make use of modified Verb Network Strengthening Treatment (VNeST), an approach for promoting verb and sentence production in people with aphasia. Studies have shown that VNeST leads to clinically significant
improvements in communication. Group therapy sessions incorporate Constraint-Induced Language Therapy (CILT) principles, which strengthen speech by systematically constraining the use of non-verbal communication during CILT sessions. The Rusk Rehabilitation ICAP also includes music group sessions, computerized treatment, counseling, and family education.
Education Keeps Pace with Rehabilitation Trends
As rehabilitation evolves, Rusk is introducing new education programs to prepare graduates for the future. In 2016, Rusk restructured its PM&R residency to include additional training in subacute rehabilitation. Residents now have the option to do a rotation at NYU Lutheran Augustana Center, a skilled nursing facility in Brooklyn. “A large percentage of our graduates will end up working in subacute rehabilitation,” says Alex Moroz, MD, associate professor of rehabilitation medicine and vice chair of education and training. “This rotation aligns their training with what they will actually encounter in practice.” Also this year, Rusk introduced a new physical therapy
residency focused on acute care. According to Dr. Moroz, the initiative reflects the growing importance of early interventions delivered in the inpatient setting.
In addition, 2016 saw the launch of Rusk’s new fellowship in pediatric rehabilitation medicine. This two-year program is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education. It offers physicians a unique opportunity to obtain advanced training in pediatric rehabilitation in the inpatient, outpatient, and specialty settings.
CONTINUING EDUCATION: 2017 COURSES
February 4: Splinting for Stiffness: A Seminar on Mobilization Orthoses
February 24: 4th Annual Concussion Across the Spectrum of Injury: Case Studies and the Latest for Diagnosis and Management
March 11: The Rusk Complex Case Series: Rehabilitation Medicine and Management of the Patient with Heart Failure
March 27–April 1: 42nd Annual Comprehensive Review of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
May 20: Rusk Lumbar Spine Symposium: Translating Evidence into Clinical Practice
For more information go to med.nyu.edu/cme
6 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
New & Noteworthy
Residency Program Adopts Digital Tools
Evidence shows that receiving feedback is essential to developing medical expertise. However, the feedback process can be daunting for both residents and faculty members. A new iPad® app called PRIMES is facilitating this essential learning activity for PM&R residents at Rusk Rehabilitation.
PRIMES was developed by the NYU School of Medicine and recently adapted for the residency program. In the middle of each rotation, residents use the app to self-assess in domains such
as diagnostic ability, patient management, procedural skill, and professionalism. Faculty mentors then provide their assessments. PRIMES matches the answers, highlighting areas of agreement and disagreement. “The app structures the feedback process and scaffolds it, making it easier for people to do,” says Dr. Moroz. “I think this tool will completely change the culture of asking for and giving feedback in our institution.”
Also this year, Rusk began transitioning residency education materials to the Brightspace learning management system.
“The Brightspace platform allows us to put all our resident education content in one place,” Dr. Moroz says. “These are true education modules, with learning objectives, materials, assessments, and the ability to track completion. The system has been up for just a few months, but residents are already heavily using it.”
Alex Moroz, MD, and Angela Stolfi, PT, DPT
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 7
After Rehab, Smartphone App Keeps Patients on Track
Research shows that many heart attack patients, despite completing outpatient cardiac rehabilitation and learning a new heart-healthy lifestyle, revert to their former lifestyle within one year, increasing their risk of a second cardiac event. To help close this adherence gap, Rusk clinicians partnered with mobile tech experts at Moving Analytics to develop a smartphone app that keeps track of patients following their cardiac rehabilitation course.
“The app lets patients record everything they do—diet, exercise, medications, weight, and blood pressure readings—so we can track their adherence to the
newly prescribed lifestyle.” says Jonathan H. Whiteson, MD, assistant professor of rehabilitation medicine and vice chair of clinical operations.
Data from the app is transmitted to a dashboard monitored by cardiopulmonary specialists at Rusk. “The specialists watch for things like missed medications or a spike in blood pressure,” explains Tamara Bushnik, PhD, FACRM, associate professor of rehabilitation medicine and director of inter-hospital research and knowledge translation. “If one of these things happens, staff can send a message through the app and have a two-way
conversation with the patient.”The researchers are currently conducting
a clinical trial to test the smartphone app against standard discharge instructions alone. Dr. Whiteson believes the app could become an important element in the rehabilitation toolbox. “It allows us to maintain contact with a population that is busy and tends to fall out of compliance with a heart-healthy lifestyle alone.
NYU LANGONE AFFILIATION WITH WINTHROP-UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL BRINGS EXPANDED AND ENHANCED HEALTHCARE NETWORKS TO LONG ISLAND
NYU Langone and Winthrop-University Hospital on Long Island have reached an agreement to affiliate the institutions’ extensive healthcare networks. NYU Langone, with more than 150 ambulatory sites throughout the region, will complement Winthrop-University Hospital’s main campus, multiple ambulatory sites and network of 66 faculty and community-based practices in more than 140 locations extending from eastern Long Island to Upper Manhattan.
The affiliation will further expand NYU Langone’s presence on Long Island, while enhancing Winthrop’s inpatient and outpatient services with improved access to NYU Langone’s wide range of medical and surgical specialties.
“This agreement publicly confirms our confidence that an affiliation will allow both of our institutions to collaborate and share best practices to better meet the
healthcare needs of the communities we serve,” says Robert I. Grossman, MD, the Saul J. Farber Dean and CEO of NYU Langone. Pending regulatory approval, the institutions are aiming to complete their affiliation in spring 2017.
8 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
Translational Clinical Care
Rehab Medicine Leading a Changing
Healthcare Landscape ACROSS DISCIPLINES, RUSK REHABILITATION IS ESTABLISHING A CARE MODEL WHERE
PM&R FINDS A KEY ROLE IN THE CHANGING LANDSCAPE OF HEALTHCARE. OUR PHYSIATRISTS AND CLINICAL TEAM ARE TAKING ON NYU LANGONE’S MOST COMPLEX
CASES, FORGING NEW TREATMENT METHODS, AND LEADING INNOVATIVE VALUE-BASED MANAGEMENT PRACTICES.
Preeti Raghavan, MD
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 9
With the Shift from Volume to Value, Rehabilitation Takes a Leading Role
The ongoing transition from fee-for-service to value-based payment has created a new imperative for caregivers to ensure that healthcare spending is linked to quality, not quantity. At Rusk Rehabilitation, leaders are using a range of strategies to enhance care while improving cost efficiency.
“Cost in healthcare is obviously driven by things like service and device utilization, radiology use, and pharmacy spending,” says Jonathan H. Whiteson, MD, assistant professor of rehabilitation medicine and vice chair of clinical operations. “But a big issue is length of stay, because every day in the hospital is associated with significant cost.”
Over the last few years, Rusk care teams have used early intervention strategies to reduce length of stay (LOS) in several units. In 2016, they turned their focus to inpatient rehabilitation. There, data showed that the acute care hospital’s observed-to-expected (O/E) LOS for rehab patients was near 1.5. “To some degree this was understandable, since these patients were the sickest of the sick,” Dr. Whiteson says. “But based on our success with early intervention in other units, we knew there was an opportunity to improve.”
Hospital leaders began by setting an overall target ratio of 1.1 for O/E LOS for the acute care hospital’s inpatient rehabilitation patients. Led by Dr. Whiteson, Kate Parkin, PT, DPT, MA, clinical assistant professor of rehabilitation medicine and senior director of therapy services, and Katherine Hochman, MD, assistant professor of medicine, then analyzed acute rehab processes to understand what was extending patient stays. They identified three issues:
• First, acute care clinical teams were uncertain about which physiatrist to call for which patient. They often turned to the physician they knew best rather than the one who specialized in the particular area needed.
• Second, rehabilitation was often consulted very late in the patient’s acute stay, frequently the day before a planned discharge, which did not always give the clinician enough time to carry out an effective care plan.
• Third, patients were frequently admitted to the wrong rehabilitation unit based on the preference of the referring acute care team, versus the patient’s diagnosis and the accepting rehab unit’s specialty. The wrong patient on the wrong rehabilitation unit, in turn, blocked beds and patient flow—and extended the acute care hospital’s LOS.
“Rehabilitation medicine should consider itself central to the value-based care movement.”
—Jonathan Whiteson, MD
10 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
Translational Clinical Care
Once they identified the issues leading to service inefficiencies, Dr. Whiteson and his colleagues implemented several changes to address them, including:
STANDARDIZED CONSULT ORDER. “Previously, staff could order a physiatry consult in many ways—by phone, by email, through one of several EMR functions, or simply by grabbing a colleague’s elbow in the elevator,” Dr. Whiteson says. “We realized that we had to standardize this, so we developed a diagnosis-based consult request within our EMR.” The system uses 10 diagnostic categories, ranging from orthopaedic rehabilitation through hemorrhagic brain injury.
“Now, for instance, the specialist in cardiopulmonary rehabilitation checks the cardiopulmonary consult list, and picks up only those patients referred under that diagnostic category.”
TIMELY PHYSIATRY CONSULT REQUEST. Calls for a physiatry consult from the acute care team as the patient was discharged to inpatient rehabilitation left little time to coordinate admission and care at Rusk, clearly contributing to prolonged length of stay. Dr. Whiteson explains, “From previous research, we knew that the earlier our rehabilitation therapists saw patients in acute care, the shorter those patients’ LOS. Our ICU early mobilization data indicated significant length of stay reduction with early involvement of the rehabilitation team.” Changing the culture to encourage consultation to the physiatrist much earlier in the patient’s stay has yielded significant results.
16-HOUR TARGET FOR PHYSIATRY CONSULT COMPLETION. Prior data often showed a wide lag from the time a physiatry consult was called to consult’s completion. Acute care hospital teams often waited for
feedback from the physiatrist for discharge planning, and few consult reports contained specific details regarding the patient’s ongoing rehabilitation needs—information crucial for acute care teams to complete disposition planning and expedite care. To ensure patients saw a physiatrist as soon as possible, Rusk targeted completion of consults to a 16-hour window after the order was placed. “In addition, we specified that the consult has to be directive,” Dr. Whiteson said.
“The physiatrist has to state clearly whether the patient is a candidate for inpatient rehab or can be discharged home with other rehabilitation recommendations.” This clear directive now helps the acute care team expeditiously plan the next step in the patient’s care.
MULTIDISCIPLINARY DISCHARGE PLANNING. To strengthen the discharge process, the Rusk team identified ways to more deeply involve rehabilitation specialists. “We added physical therapists to the morning huddle and to daily rounds on each acute care unit,” says Parkin. “Our standardized interdisciplinary rounds have helped ensure rehabilitation is involved in discharge decisions, and our goal as a team is to ensure that the right patient gets to the right bed at the right time.” To that end, processes were adjusted to ensure that every rehabilitation candidate is discharged to the correct rehab unit.
EDUCATION AND CULTURE CHANGE. To embed the newly created care and discharge processes systemically, rehabilitation leaders educated physicians and other interdisciplinary providers on the role of physiatry, the phases of rehabilitation, and the value of an early physiatrist consult. “We knew this was not only about changing practice to order a consult early, but actually changing the culture of our medical and surgical teams,” says Dr. Whiteson.
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 11
Jonathan Whiteson, MD, and Kate Parkin, PT, DPT, MA, with Fritz Francois, MD, Chief Medical Officer of NYU Langone
EARLY RESULTS: SHORTER LOS, HIGHER PATIENT SATISFACTION
These new consult processes were put in place during the first two months of 2016. Between February and March, the average time to completed physiatry consult decreased from 22.7 to 10.2 hours, with averages remaining under the 16-hour target in the months that followed. The earlier, more directive physiatrist consults have ensured that patients receive rehabilitation interventions more quickly—which, in turn, has had a significant impact on patient stays. As a result, between September 2015 and July 2016, O/E LOS in acute rehab declined from 1.47 to 1.15. In addition, efforts to ensure the practice of “the right patient on the right unit at the right time” has not only eliminated rehabilitation patients being treated on the wrong specialty Rusk unit, but has also enhanced bed availability at Rusk as well as patient flow and timely discharge of acute care patients.
The ultimate impact of the rehabilitation team’s early involvement with the entire rehabilitation team extends far beyond cost control. By both shortening stays and increasing home discharge rates, these interventions also help increase patient satisfaction— a key measure of quality under value-based payment.
Dr. Whiteson believes that these results demonstrate the key role of rehabilitation medicine in the new healthcare environment. “I think everyone in rehabilitation medicine should recognize how much we have to contribute in terms of coordinating care, leading care teams, and having the vision to identify new opportunities to enhance quality while minimizing costs,” he says. “Rehabilitation medicine should consider itself central to the value-based care movement.”
12 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
Translational Clinical Care
“For a long time, people have thought that something besides neuronal damage contributed to muscle stiffness, but we didn’t know what it was,” says Preeti Raghavan, MD, assistant professor of rehabilitation medicine and vice chair of research. “What was hotly debated is whether a contracture begins to occur very early after the injury, or whether it results from later changes that take place in the muscles themselves and surrounding soft tissue.”
About three years ago, Dr. Raghavan began discussing the problem with Antonio Stecco, MD, PhD, clinical instructor of rehabilitation medicine and an expert in fascial manipulation. “This type of friction massage is incredibly effective at restoring movement for people with musculoskeletal pain,” Dr. Raghavan says. “We started to talk about what substances this massage could be releasing, and looked at the possibility that it was mechanically breaking up hyaluronic acid.”
Hyaluronic acid is a non-sulfated, high-molecular-weight glycosaminoglycan that is abundant in the connective tissues surrounding muscle fibers. “It acts as a lubricant that allows muscle fibers to slide against each other during movement,” Dr. Raghavan says. “But when hyaluronan is left to sit still and accumulate, it binds to itself and becomes extremely viscous. So instead of acting as a lubricant, it acts like a glue that binds muscles together and gives the perception of stiffness and increased resistance to movement.” The researchers hypothesized that post-stroke muscle stiffness was caused by the accumulation of hyaluronic acid due to immobility. If so, then muscle stiffness could potentially be resolved by breaking up the hyaluronan chemically with the enzyme hyaluronidase.
Novel Treatment Strategy Reduces Post-Stroke Muscle Stiffness
Muscle stiffness is a common aftereffect of stroke and other neurologic injuries. But is it caused directly by neuronal hyperactivity? A group of Rusk investigators recently proposed an alternative hypothesis—and a new treatment strategy—for muscle stiffness related to cerebral injury.
CASE SERIES SHOWS DRAMATIC IMPROVEMENT
Dr. Raghavan and colleagues tested the hypothesis by injecting recombinant hyaluronidase into a series of 20 patients with moderately severe upper-limb muscle stiffness. The results were published in the July 2016 issue of EBioMedicine. “For most patients, resistance to passive movement decreased within a week, and those results were maintained at both one month and three months,” she says. Modified Ashworth Scale scores were reduced significantly across the patient cohort. In addition, active range of motion improved at one and three months. “It’s typically thought that you are not likely to see much change in active motion in stroke patients after two or three years. So to get these changes in active motion and see them increase over time has been very exciting.”
Hyaluronidase is a potential treatment not only for stroke patients, but also for individuals with neurologic conditions, such as cerebral palsy and traumatic brain injury. According to Dr. Raghavan, it can be used in conjunction with other treatments like intrathecal baclofen. However, hyaluronidase offers significant benefits over central nervous system depressants since it does not cause weakness, drowsiness, or cognitive impairment. Another benefit is that it can facilitate physical therapy. “Many times stroke patients have a hard time in therapy because their muscles are so stiff,” Dr. Raghavan says. “What we have found is that by reducing the stiffness, therapy efforts are much more likely to yield benefits for patients.”
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 13
Leveraging Technology to Aid Stroke RehabRusk investigators are developing several technologies for pinpointing post-stroke deficits and targeting therapeutic interventions.
MIRRORED MOTION BIMANUAL ARM TRAINER (BAT)
The Mirrored Motion BAT combines a rowing simulation device with a videogame interface to help stroke victims regain arm function through “mirrored motion” therapy. In 2016, Preeti Raghavan, MD, and her colleagues launched three separate clinical trials focused on the use of Mirrored Motion BAT in acute rehabilitation, outpatient rehabilitation, and pediatric home-based rehabilitation.
WIRELESS FEEDBACK WEARABLES
Dr. Raghavan has also collaborated with researchers at the NYU Tandon School of Engineering to develop a mechatronic jacket and gloves for stroke rehabilitation therapy. The wearable devices record patient movements and transmit them wirelessly to a computer. A videogame interface provides the patient with highly personalized feedback during movement exercises. The goal is to enable patients to receive precision therapy at home. “Ultimately, the therapist will be able to teach movement strategies to patients in the clinic and then monitor them remotely with a smartphone,” Dr. Raghavan says. “Most importantly, the wearables allow patients to work on their rehabilitation remotely on their own time.”
LOCATING THE BROKEN LINK BETWEEN EYE AND HAND MOVEMENT IN STROKE PATIENTS
John-Ross (J.R.) Rizzo, MD, assistant professor of rehabilitation medicine and neurology, is using advanced technology to study eye-hand coordination in stroke patients. “Research has shown that when the eye and the hand work together, the eye informs the hand. But recent studies have also suggested that the hand actually informs the eye as well,” he says. “So there is a bidirectional flow of information between these systems.” In the Visuomotor Integration Laboratory at Rusk, Dr. Rizzo and colleagues use advanced motion capture systems to capture precise, simultaneous measurements of ocular motor and manual motor functions. Their data shows that in many stroke patients, the link between those two systems breaks down.
“The technology is allowing us to objectively highlight where some of those breakdowns are,” he says. “Our hope is to characterize these deficits in fine detail, and create precise, patient-tailored therapeutic targets to help restore this link, all through novel biofeedback strategies.”
CLINIC OPENED, CLINICAL TRIAL PLANNED
In fall 2016, Rusk opened a hyaluronidase injection clinic, treating adult patients from across the United States. Dr. Raghavan and colleagues are currently planning a randomized, controlled clinical trial to demonstrate the efficacy of hyaluronidase for treating muscle stiffness due to neurologic injury.
“Our results so far show us that the immobilization that occurs as a consequence of a neurological injury is a major contributor to muscle stiffness,” says Dr. Raghavan. “The most exciting thing is that we now have a direct way to actually bring relief to patients.”
14 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
Translational Clinical Care
After Groundbreaking Face Transplant, Rusk Practitioners Forge New Rehabilitation Frontiers
For firefighter Patrick Hardison of Mississippi, a 2001 accident—in which he became trapped under a collapsed roof and suffered disfiguring burns over most of his head—led to 70 grueling reconstructive procedures in the years that followed.
In 2015, his long cycle of surgeries was disrupted by a landmark, 26-hour transplant procedure led by Eduardo D. Rodriguez, MD, DDS, the Helen L. Kimmel Professor of Reconstructive Plastic Surgery, at NYU Langone Medical Center. Performing the most extensive face transplant ever, surgeons replaced Hardison’s entire face and scalp, including his lips, ears, and eyelids.
For rehabilitation providers at Rusk, the face transplant catalyzed the creation of a long and complex treatment plan that has challenged every conventional approach to post-transplant rehabilitation medicine. “We were involved in the planning with the face transplant team from the outset, and we were ready to address Patrick’s recovery as we would for patients following other extremely complicated procedures,” says Jeffrey M. Cohen, MD, clinical professor of rehabilitation medicine and director of medically complex rehabilitation. “However, his case was obviously incredibly unique and brought distinct challenges.”
AN EARLY PRIORITY: REANIMATING MUSCLES AND NERVES
During the procedure, surgeons attached a donor’s cranial and facial nerves to Hardison’s facial substructure. The complexity of transplanting entirely new facial nerves—the nerves needed to be adapted and trained to work for Hardison—necessitated muscle rehabilitation approaches above and beyond those employed for typical facial nerve trauma.
“We initially started with face reanimation, training his facial muscles to move and form expressions,” says Matina Balou, PhD, speech-language pathologist. “That involved stretching and massage exercises
and motivating Patrick to perform even very slight movements of different facial muscles.” His face transplant was the first to include the muscles that control blinking, so eyelid movement presented additional unfamiliar territory. “We began by trying to get Patrick to open his eyelids as much as possible,” Dr. Balou says. Three days after surgery, Hardison finally blinked—for the first time in 14 years.
While the Rusk team addressed facial movement, they also focused on swallowing therapy as an early priority. “After surgery, Patrick’s pharyngeal muscles were very weak, so we spent a lot of time on swallowing maneuvers to help him clear his pharynx,” Dr. Balou says. She began by placing a drop of water at the very back of his throat, eliciting a swallow reflex and stimulating the pharyngeal muscles. “It was a very slow
26 Hoursface transplant total procedure time
100+physicians, nurses, and support
staff involved in the surgery
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 15
process, but with a lot of work Patrick was able to swallow and transition from a feeding tube to a regular diet without restrictions within three months, which was much faster than we anticipated.”
KEY ROLE FOR PHYSICAL AND OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY
Meanwhile, Patrick progressed quickly through physical and occupational therapy. “What was really interesting about this case is that we didn’t have a benchmark timeline for rehabilitation,” said Megan Evangelist, MS, OTR/L, occupational therapy clinical specialist. Five days after his transplant, Hardison was measuring about half the hand grip strength of someone his age and gender. PT and OT staff worked with him six days a week. One month later, he was scoring within normal limits for hand grip strength and performing basic daily activities independently. According to Evangelist, personal determination was a deciding factor. “Patrick was highly motivated to participate in therapy,” she says. “It was pretty amazing to see how quickly he progressed.”
ADDRESSING UNEXPECTED CHALLENGES
Other milestones came more slowly than expected. “I thought that because Patrick did not have any speech impairment before the transplant, he would have a very smooth transition to speaking afterward,” Dr. Balou says. In reality, major deconditioning after more than a day of surgery left him with severe speech impairments at multiple levels.
“In terms of speech-language pathology, Patrick was different in many unexpected ways,” Dr. Balou says. One challenge was that his tongue weakness was asymmetrical, and the weakness shifted from left to right after a few weeks. To address this, Dr. Balou focused on strengthening Hardison’s tongue with a series of exercises that utilized a feedback device to measure the amount of force he exerted. “His tongue eventually became much stronger and with that strength, his speech was much more fluent.”
The procedure has been transformative in ways beyond its physical effects. “Patrick has realized so many milestones that we can see through his eyes,” Dr. Balou notes. “You can see how happy he is that no one notices his injuries anymore because he’s just a normal guy in the crowd.”
Preoperative: August 2014 Postoperative: November 11, 2015 Postoperative: August 3, 2016
16 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
Translational Clinical Care
New Device Brings Neuromodulation Technology to Post-Stroke Shoulder Pain
For the many people who develop moderate-to-severe shoulder pain after suffering a stroke, treatment options have traditionally been limited.
FOR PAIN PATIENTS, INTEGRATIVE CARE PROVIDES OPTIONS
Rusk clinicians are committed to providing chronic pain sufferers the most effective treatments available. For many, that may be physical therapy or a high-tech implant like the StimRouter. For others, the best treatment plan may include alternative therapies such as acupuncture.
“We often see patients who have tried everything but nothing worked,” says Alex Moroz, MD, associate professor of rehabilitation medicine and vice chair for education at Rusk. “Sometimes acupuncture will help these patients. I look at it as one of the tools in our tool belt for chronic pain.”
Dr. Kim agrees. “There is a lot of interest in acupuncture and, especially with its use during the recent Olympics, in cupping,” he notes. “I use both with some patients, because they offer effective pain relief.”
Given their effectiveness, these alternative approaches also have a role in research, education, and training. Research led by Barbara Siminovich-Blok, ND, MS, LAc, NCCAOM Dpl, includes a study that looks to determine the effects of acupuncture on improving cognitive performance in individuals who have experienced a left-sided cerebrovascular accident and to clarify the mechanism of improvement via functional brain imaging. For residents, Rusk collaborates with the Tri-State College of Acupuncture to offer a unique acupuncture training track that can lead to credits toward licensure in acupuncture.
“I’ve seen many of these patients over the years, and they’re quite challenging to treat,” says Charles Kim, MD, assistant professor of rehabilitation medicine and anesthesiology. “Frequently, the only recourse is pain medication, with its concurrent side effects like sleepiness, constipation, and addiction—so it’s a real trade-off.”
In 2016, Dr. Kim became one of the first physicians in the country to treat post-stroke hemiplegic shoulder pain with an implanted device called StimRouter, which was recently cleared by the FDA. “It’s based on neuromodulation technologies that have been around for decades,” he says. “The big difference with this device is that the technology has been miniaturized and is much less invasive.”
SIGNIFICANT IMPROVEMENT IN PAIN MEASURES
The implant is a thin, flexible electrode that resembles a short strand of spaghetti. During an outpatient procedure, a surgeon uses real-time image guidance to position the electrode near the axillary nerve. “It’s a very elegant procedure,” Dr. Kim says. “We use two small incisions that are maybe half to one centimeter each.”
The patient controls the stimulator with an external transmitter worn on an armband. When activated, an electrical current modulates the nerve signals involved in pain perception. “One of the great things about this device is that there is no implanted internal battery,” Dr. Kim explains. “The patient can stimulate the area for 30 to 60 minutes, and the pain relief will often last for several hours.”
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 17
Early results are encouraging. “One longtime patient has endured constant shoulder pain since his stroke 10 years ago, because he preferred to deal with it over the side effects of pain medications,” says Dr. Kim. Shortly after receiving the StimRouter, the patient reported a pain improvement of about 70 percent. “Another patient suffered from intractable pain for years in spite of her pain medications,” he says. “After we implanted the device, she experienced about 90 percent improvement.”
POTENTIAL FOR WIDE APPLICATION
The initial indication for the neuromodulation device is post-stroke shoulder pain, but according to Dr. Kim, the device offers many possibilities. “The design is a real breakthrough, so the uses will undoubtedly expand to include other chronic pain conditions,” he says. “It could potentially relieve pain anywhere there’s a nerve, so the number of indications is almost infinite.”
Charles Kim, MD
18 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
Translational Clinical Care
Expanding Early Mobilization to Complex Pediatric Patients
NYU Langone is one of a handful of hospitals pioneering early mobilization initiatives for pediatric critical care patients. After a 2014 Rusk pilot program in the adult ICU reduced overall length of stay by 30 percent and more than doubled the home discharge rate, early mobilization protocols were introduced into the pediatric ICU (PICU).
In 2016, Rusk doubled down on this approach: A quality improvement team launched an effort to increase the percentage of PICU patients who are mobilized within recommended time frames—18 hours post-ICU admission for non-ventilated patients, and 48 hours for patients on mechanical ventilation.
“This was a multipronged initiative,” says Jodi Herbsman, PT, DPT, program manager of acute care rehabilitation therapy services. “We updated the PICU admission order set to include activity orders, implemented an algorithm to identify children eligible for early mobility, educated patients and families on the benefits of early mobilization, and trained staff on how to safely mobilize critically ill patients.”
Between fall 2015 and summer 2016, the percentage of PICU patients mobilized within the recommended time frame increased from 60 percent to 85 percent. At the same time, the average time to mobilization decreased from 20 hours to 10 hours, and there were no safety incidents associated with mobilizing these patients.
Renat Sukhov, MD, medical director of pediatric rehabilitation, believes that early mobilization is important for all PICU patients, including children
with complex inherited muscle disorders. “Even patients with severe neuromuscular disorders can benefit from timely and early interventions during their PICU stay,” he says. “We aim to provide these patients with a high-quality, goal-oriented, and family-centered structured rehabilitation continuum of care from PICU onward.”
EARLY REHABILITATION ENABLES RECOVERY IN COMPLEX CASE
In one example, early mobilization proved effective in a recent case involving a four-year-old girl with a neuromuscular disease of unknown etiology, loosely defined as neuromyotonia. In 2015, the patient was hospitalized with severe pneumonia. She developed severe respiratory compromise and was ventilator-dependent for an extended period. In addition, she was diagnosed with tracheal stenosis requiring laryngotracheal reconstruction.
The patient spent about six weeks in the PICU as a result of her primary condition, and she declined significantly in functional abilities. Early rehabilitation interventions began while she was still intubated. Bedside, physical, and occupational therapy interventions included sitting and standing while mechanically ventilated. Early speech therapy focused on communication, and she was able to use specialized devices to allow her to communicate with family, visitors, and the medical team.
In March 2016, the patient was admitted to pediatric inpatient rehabilitation. The multidimensional nature of her condition and functional inabilities stemming from both her primary neuromuscular conditions and the negative effects of her prolonged hospitalization
“We found that early mobilization in the PICU is feasible, safe, and ultimately and most importantly, an opportunity for us to enhance patient care.”
—Jodi Herbsman, PT, DPT
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 19
Renat Sukhov, MD
and surgeries required a coordinated approach led by a pediatric physiatrist. As a result, the four-year-old patient made significant progress medically, physically, functionally, and psychologically, and managed to walk out of the rehab unit at discharge and be reintegrated to her home and preschool environment.
“The challenge of a severe neuromuscular disorder and the necessity for rehabilitative teamwork were critical,” Dr. Sukhov says. “Timely goal-oriented, disease-specific early rehabilitation interventions allow seamless transition home and add quality to their lives, providing necessary structure for the patient and hope for their families at a time of severe distress.”
24% to 89%increase in patients with activity orders in the PICU
during the implementation of the program
20 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
Translational Clinical Care
New Strategies to Detect, Track, and Treat Brain Injury
Patients with moderate to severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) can face life-altering disabilities. But even people who suffer mild TBI/concussion may experience chronic problems in physical and cognitive function. At Rusk, researchers are collaborating across disciplines to develop innovative strategies for diagnosing, tracking, and treating TBI.
NEW REFERENCE DATA HONES MMPI TO ASSESS MILD TBI
Rehabilitation psychologists use the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) to assess the psychopathology of patients with concussion. Yet many of the physical and cognitive sequelae of mild TBI produce MMPI scale elevations that can lead to misinterpretation. Corrective factors have been suggested, but the real solution is to obtain reference group data specific to this patient population. At Rusk, researchers administered MMPI tests to 200 outpatients with uncomplicated mild TBI. The data establishes a comparison sample that can help define the typical MMPI-2 profile for concussion patients. “By getting normative data for this population, we hope to help rehabilitation psychologists better identify individuals with unexpected scale elevations,” says Amanda Childs, PhD, psychology postdoctoral fellow. “That will help us identify patients who could benefit from additional interventions.”
POST-TBI EMOTIONS: FROM SUBJECTIVE MEASURES TO PHYSIOLOGICAL MARKERS
Many people with TBI experience emotional impairments, such as mood swings, anxiety, irritability, and depression. “Emotional problems in TBI are suboptimally diagnosed in many clinical settings,” says Prin Amorapanth, MD, PhD, instructor of rehabilitation medicine. “The problem is that current clinical measures rely heavily on subjective complaints.” To uncover more objective physiologic markers of post-TBI emotional impairment, Dr. Amorapanth
and colleagues recently conducted research focused on the autonomic nervous system. In the study, patients with chronic TBI and healthy control subjects were shown clips of emotion-provoking movie scenes; for example, to elicit fear, subjects viewed a scene from The Silence of the Lambs. During the test, the research team recorded heart-rate variability to measure activity
of the sympathetic nervous system, and respiratory activity to generate measures of sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system activity. The results showed that TBI patients had a markedly decreased sympathetic nervous system activity in response to amusing stimuli and a markedly increased sympathetic nervous system activity to sad stimuli. “Our study shows that TBI patients process emotions differently from a physiological standpoint and in ways that do not correspond with their subjective experience of emotion,” Dr. Amorapanth says. “If we could use physiological markers to characterize these emotional changes objectively, we could better diagnose these changes and identify more effective treatments.”
One of 16centers in the United States to be designated as
Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems (TBIMS) of care
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 21
EDUCATION EFFORT SEEKS TO OVERCOME CULTURAL DISPARITIES IN TBI CARE
Rusk Rehabilitation is one of 16 centers nationwide designated as Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems (TBIMS) of care. As part of this government-funded program, investigators at Rusk are midway through a multiyear project to design inpatient education materials for TBI patients from culturally diverse backgrounds. In the project’s first phase, researchers contacted patients six months after discharge to assess their barriers to receiving follow-up care. “In many cases, we found that patients faced personal barriers directly related to their TBI,” says Tamara Bushnik, PhD, FACRM, associate professor of rehabilitation medicine and director of inter-hospital research and knowledge translation. In the current phase of the project, patients view two educational videos, available in English or Spanish, in the days before discharge: one video that provides basic information about brain injury, and the other with information on discharge, medications, and
follow-up care. The study is underway at Bellevue Hospital, which serves one of New York City’s most ethnically diverse populations. “The patients at Bellevue often lack social support, which we know is so crucial for good outcomes after TBI,” Dr. Bushnik says. “Our research here could really shed light on ways inpatient rehabilitation could change in many hospitals in the years ahead.”
THERAPEUTIC IMPROVEMENTS OBSERVED YEARS AFTER TBI
Although most people with moderate to severe TBI recover through cognitive rest, about 20 percent experience persistent symptoms, such as dizziness, headache, insomnia, and difficulty concentrating. These patients often face a discouraging Catch-22. “First they are told to take a leave from work and refrain from physical activities,” says Joseph Adams, PT, DPT, NCS, senior physical therapist. “Then, after four or five months of persistent symptoms, they are told that they’re outside
Tamara Bushnik, PhD, and the TBI Model Systems team
22 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
Translational Clinical Care
the initial window of recovery.” Adams and colleagues asked whether these patients could benefit from rehabilitation even months or years after their initial injury. In their study, patients at an average of 12 months post-injury took part in vestibular rehabilitation. Before therapy, only 50 percent of patients were able to work at least part-time; after therapy, that rate increased to 92 percent. In addition, the full-time work rate went from 15 percent to 50 percent. Adams theorizes that late rehabilitation helps patients counteract avoidance behaviors. “By giving patients a graded approach to start moving their head and participating in light aerobic exercise again, they are empowered to return to life activities they thought they were unable to do.”
EYE MOVEMENT STUDY YIELDS NEW CONCUSSION BIOMARKERS
Rusk Rehabilitation specialists recently partnered with colleagues in the Department of Neurology to create a digitized version of the King-Devick test, a
rapid number-naming test used to detect concussion. They found that chronic concussion patients take an average of 10 seconds longer than healthy individuals to complete the test. To determine whether concussion patients also exhibit slower eye movements, the research group applied their testing methodology to patients with post-concussion syndrome. Using advanced high-resolution video technology, they measured the sequence of quick eye movements (saccades) and intermittent pauses or rests (intersaccadic intervals) that typically characterize eye control associated with reading. “When we looked at kinematics—eye movement velocity and acceleration—we did not see a significant difference between concussion patients and healthy patients,” says John-Ross (J.R.) Rizzo, MD, assistant professor of rehabilitation medicine and neurology. Instead, the group made three novel discoveries. “First, we found that the pauses between eye movements—the intersaccadic intervals—are longer for concussion patients,” he continues. “Second, we found that their eye movements are dysmetric, meaning a little off target. And third, concussion patients tend to make more eye movements when they’re completing the task.” Dr. Rizzo believes these findings provide a new tool for measuring mild TBI and tracking recovery. “We now have the ability to quantitatively analyze specific metrics that are, in essence, behavioral biomarkers.”
Janet Rucker, MD, and J.R. Rizzo, MD, using eye-tracking technology to study concussion
3,300+PATIENTS
have received care at NYU Langone’s multidisciplinary Concussion Center since it launched in 2013
With Early Interdisciplinary Rehabilitation, a NSTEMI Patient Navigates His Complex Recovery
Rehabilitation medicine plays a key role in achieving good outcomes for medically complex patients—not only in supporting their recovery, but also in identifying complications before they become further problems.
PRESENTATION
In one recent case, the patient, a 72-year-old man from the Bronx, New York, presented to Tisch Hospital with accelerating exertional angina. He was diagnosed with non-ST segment elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI) and after cardiac catheterization underwent a quadruple coronary artery bypass graft.
The patient’s postoperative course was prolonged and very complicated, according to his physician, Jonathan H. Whiteson, MD, assistant professor of rehabilitation medicine and vice chair of clinical operations. Problems included acute blood loss anemia, gastrointestinal bleeding, hypervolemia, and hypotensive episodes as part of cardiogenic shock, and rapid atrial fibrillation, all contributing to his critical state. Due to persistent respiratory failure and dysphagia, the patient received a tracheostomy and a PEG tube.
Over the course of several weeks in the ICU, the patient developed symptoms of critical illness myopathy and displayed significant functional deficits. “This level of critical care medicine understandably focuses on survival by all means, but that often means missing troubling warning signs—notably progressive physical weakness—that can lead to significant functional challenges during recovery,” says Dr. Whiteson.
DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT: EARLY MOBILIZATION AND DETECTING DELIRIUM
While still on mechanical ventilation in the ICU, the patient underwent early mobilization protocols with a high frequency of therapy services that Rusk developed as part of a successful pilot last year. “We based our interventions on some early literature showing that when patients are mobilized sooner in the intensive care setting, they experience fewer complications,” Dr. Whiteson explains.
While working with the patient, rehabilitation staff noted his fluctuating mental state. The Rusk team’s presence in critical
care was key to identifying a common, yet often undetected, problem—delirium. “Our rehabilitation team is trained to evaluate for confusional states, cognitive deficiencies, and delirium, because these problems will have a big impact on physical function and overall daily life,” Dr. Whiteson says.
To address the problem of delirium in critical care, Rusk physicians reintroduce sleep-wake cycles for the patient and work with the intensive care team to limit medications that may cause confusion. Says Dr. Whiteson, “part of this involves limiting sedation, so we encourage the intensive care team to give the patient a ‘sedation vacation.’ That means the patient is kept awake during the day to take part in physical therapy.”
RESULTS AND POST-DISCHARGE PLAN
After seven weeks in critical care, the patient transitioned to inpatient rehabilitation. There, he received comprehensive cardiopulmonary rehabilitation services, including physical and occupational therapy and speech-language pathology. The Rusk team addressed his profound critical illness; myopathy-related weakness; balance, transfer, and gait issues; speech and swallowing function; personal care; and psychological barriers to recovery. Rusk Rehabilitation nurses were essential in the monitoring and management of his variable cardiovascular and respiratory parameters, and in supporting and reinforcing his functional gains during the arduous rehabilitative process.
Following 17 days in acute rehab, the patient was discharged home without a tracheostomy, walking without an assistive device, and performing ADLs with supervision. For this patient, the early involvement of the rehabilitation team helped avoid the potentially devastating consequences of a prolonged postoperative recovery.
“We are trying to move critical care from a ‘survival culture’ to a ‘thriving culture’ that helps patients get through the hospital episode faster and with fewer issues,” says Dr. Whiteson.
Complex Case: NSTEMI Patient
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 23
24 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
Academic Activities
Birkemeier J, Hudson T, Rizzo JR, Dai W, Selesnick I, Hasanaj L, Balcer L, Galetta S, Rucker J. The ocular motor underpinnings of rapid number-naming as a sideline performance measure for concussion. Neurology. 2016; 86(16).
Busato M, Quagliati C, Magri L, Filippi A, Sanna A, Branchini M, Marchand AM, Stecco A. Fascial Manipulation Associated With Standard Care Compared to Only Standard Postsurgical Care for Total Hip Arthroplasty: A Randomized Controlled Trial. PM&R. 2016.
Bushnik T, Smith M, Im B. Role of acculturation in rehabilitation outcomes. Brain Injury. 2016; 30(5-6): 690.
Cho YS, Sohlberg M, Rath J, Diller L. Exploring the Psychosocial Impact of Ekso Bionics Technology. Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation. 2016; 97(10): e57.
Cobbs L, Hasanaj L, Amorapanth P, Rizzo JR, Nolan R, Serrano L, Raynowska J, Rucker JC, Jordan BD, Galetta SL, Balcer LJ. Mobile Universal Lexicon Evaluation System (MULES) test: A new measure of rapid picture naming for concussion. Journal of the Neurological Sciences. 2016.
Corcoran JR, Herbsman JM, Bushnik T, Vanlew S, Stolfi A, Parkin K, McKenzie A, Hall GW, Joseph W, Whiteson J, Flanagan SR. Early Rehabilitation in the Medical and Surgical Intensive Care Units for Patients With and Without Mechanical Ventilation: An Interprofessional Performance Improvement Project. PM&R. 2016.
Dempsey K, Birkemeier J, Hudson T, Dai W, Selesnick I, Hasanaj L, Balcer L, Galetta S, Rucker J, Rizzo JR. Visual performance of non-native versus native English speakers on a sideline concussion screen: An objective look at eye movement recordings. Neurology. 2016; 86(16).
Diab M, Poulos PJ, Grant EC, Mirchandani M, Maikos J. Gait analysis after bilateral quadriceps tendon rupture in a patient who elected to be conservatively managed: A case report. PM&R. 2016; Conference.
Dijkers M, Gordon W, Bogner J, Cicerone K, Flanagan S, Dams-O’Connor K, Kolakowsky-Hayner S. Guidelines for the rehabilitation and disease management of adults with moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury: Methodology and PICOT questions. Brain Injury. 2016; 30(5-6): 512.
Ellois V, Long C, Childs A, Smith J, Amorapanth PX, Bertisch H, Lui Y, Rath JF. Relationships among slowed processing speed, emotional reactivity, and postconcussive symptoms in adults with mild traumatic brain injury. Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation. 2016; Conference (93rd).
Elwood D, Hall G, Feliz J. Spreading the word: Using podcasting to advance scientific knowledge across the spectrum of PM&R. PM&R. 2016; Conference.
Erkut Kucukboyaci N, Leyden K, Lee D, Girard H, Puckett O, Tecoma E, Iragui-Madoz V, McDonald C. Post-Surgical Uncinate Fasciculus Diffusivity In TLE and Its Relationship to Changes in Executive Function After ATL. Abstract 1.168. 2015 American Epilepsy Society Annual Meeting.
Evangelist M, Gartenberg A. Toolkit for developing an occupational therapy program in the ICU. SIS Quarterly Practice Connections. 2016; 1(1): 20–22.
Failla MD, Myrga JM, Ricker JH, Eixon CE, Conley YP, Wagner, AK. Posttraumatic brain injury cognitive performance is moderated by variation within ANKK1 and DRD2 genes. Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation. 2015; 30: E54–66.
Ferizi U, Rossi I, Teplensky J, Lee Y, Lendhey M, Kirsch T, Kennedy O, Bencardino J, Raya J. DTI can monitor changes in articular cartilage after a mechanically induced injury. Osteoarthritis & Cartilage. 2016; 24: S368–S369.
Gaugler JE, Reese M, Mittelman MS. Effects of the Minnesota Adaptation of the NYU Caregiver Intervention on Primary Subjective Stress of Adult Child Caregivers of Persons With Dementia. Gerontologist. 2016; 56(3): 461–474.
Gromisch ES, Zemon V, Holtzer R, Chiaravalloti ND, DeLuca J, Beier M, Farrell E, Snyder S, Schairer LC, Glukhovsky L, Botvinick J, Sloan J, Picone MA, Kim S, Foley FW. Assessing the criterion validity of four highly abbreviated measures from the Minimal Assessment of Cognitive Function in Multiple Sclerosis (MACFIMS). Clinical Neuropsychologist. 2016; 30(7): 1032–1049.
Gu W, Reddy HB, Green D, Belfi B, Einzig S. Inconsistent responding in a criminal forensic setting: An evaluation of the VRIN-r and TRIN-r scales of the MMPI–2–RF. Journal of Personality Assessment. 2016; 4: 1–11.
Gurin L, Blum S. Delusional nihilism after ‘mild’ traumatic brain injury: A case report and review of the literature on Cotard syndrome and the neuropsychiatry of time perception. Brain Injury. 2016; 30(5-6): 786–787.
Hada E, Juszczak M, Long C, Smith M, Shagalow S, Bushnik T. A demographic analysis of the barriers and supporters of enrollment for traumatic brain injury model systems (TBIMS) research. Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation. 2016; Conference (93rd): e11–e12.
Hada E, Long C, Smith M, Bushnik T. The influence of country of origin and attitudes towards healthcare, language preference and health outcomes in individuals with TBI. Brain Injury. 2016; 30(5-6): 688–689.
Hada E, Smith M, Bushnik T. Beyond the bars: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) and incarceration. Brain Injury. 2016; 30(5-6): 715.
Hainline C, Rizzo JR, Hudson T, Dai W, Joel B, Nolan R, Hasanaj L, Balcer L, Galetta S, Kister I, Rucker J. Capturing the efferent side of vision in multiple sclerosis: New data from a digitized rapid number naming task. Neurology. 2016; 86(16).
Hanson C, Lolis AM, Beric A. SEP Montage Variability Comparison during Intraoperative Neurophysiologic Monitoring. Frontiers in Neurology. 2016; 7: 105–105.
Hart T, Novack TA, Temkin N, Barber J, Dikmen Sureyya S, Diaz-Arrastia R, Ricker J, Hesdorffer DC, Jallo J, Hsu NH, Zafonte R. Duration of Posttraumatic Amnesia Predicts Neuropsychological and Global Outcome in Complicated Mild Traumatic Brain Injury. Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation. 2016; 31(6): E1–E9.
Hasan S, McGee A, Weinberg M, Bansal A, Hamula M, Wolfson T, Zuckerman J, Jazrawi L. Change in Driving Performance Following Arthroscopic Shoulder Surgery. International Journal of Sports Medicine. 2016; 37(9): 748–753.
Hasanaj L, Webb N, Birkemeier J, Serrano L, Nolan R, Raynowska J, Souza-Filho L, Hudson T, Rizzo JR, Dai W, Rucker J, Galetta S, Balcer L. Rapid number naming and quantitative eye movements may reflect contact sport exposure in a collegiate ice hockey cohort. Neurology. 2016; 86(16).
He S, Limi S, McGreal RS, Xie Q, Brennan LA, Kantorow WL, Kokavec J, Majumdar R, Hou H Jr, Edelmann W, Liu W, Ashery-Padan R, Zavadil J, Kantorow M, Skoultchi AI, Stopka T, Cvekl A. Chromatin remodeling enzyme Snf2h regulates embryonic lens differentiation and denucleation. Development. 2016; 143(11): 1937–1947.
Hilz MJ, Liu M, Koehn J, Wang R, Ammon F, Flanagan SR, Hosl KM. Valsalva maneuver unveils central baroreflex dysfunction with altered blood pressure control in persons with a history of mild traumatic brain injury. BMC Neurology. 2016; 16(1): 61.
Hincapie O, Elkins J, Vasquez-Welsh L. Proprioception retraining for a patient with chronic wrist pain secondary to ligament injury with no structural instability. J Hand Therapy. 2016; 29: 183–190.
Hudson TE, Landy MS. Sinusoidal error perturbation reveals multiple coordinate systems for sensorymotor adaptation. Vision Research. 2016; 119: 82–98.
Kesinger MR, Juengst SB, Bertisch H, Niemeier JP, Krellman J, Pugh MJ, Kumar RG, Sperry J, Arenth PM, Fann J, Wagner AK. Acute trauma factor associations with suicidality across the first 5 years after traumatic brain injury. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 2016; 97(8): 1301–1308.
Kim S, Foley FW, Cavallo M, Howard J, Rath J, Dadon K, Rimler Z, Kalin JT. Growth and benefit finding post-trauma: A qualitative study of partners of individuals with multiple sclerosis. Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation. 2016; 97(10): e28.
Kim S, Rath JF, Zemon V, Picone MA, Portnoy JG, Foley FW. Cognitive status and employment in persons with multiple sclerosis: The effects of problem orientation. Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation. 2016; 97(10): e85.
Kim S, Zemon V, Rath JF, Picone M, Gromisch ES, Glubo H, Smith-Wexler L, Foley FW. Screening instruments for the early detection of cognitive impairment in patients with multiple sclerosis. International Journal of MS Care. 2016; epub ahead of print.
Kurella Tamura M, Pajewski NM, Bryan RN, Weiner DE, Diamond M, Van Buren P, Taylor A, Beddhu S, Rosendorff C, Jahanian H, Zaharchuk G. Chronic kidney disease, cerebral blood flow, and white matter volume in hypertensive adults. Neurology. 2016; 86(13): 1208–1216.
Li X, Black M, Xia S, Zhan C, Bertisch HC, Branch CA, DeLisi LE. Subcortical structure alterations impact language processing in individuals with schizophrenia and those at high genetic risk. Schizophrenia Research. 2015; 169: 76–82.
Lin Q, Lu J, Chen Z, Yan J, Wang H, Ouyang H, Mou Z, Huang D, O’Young B. A Survey of Speech-Language-Hearing Therapists’ Career Situation and Challenges in Mainland China. Folia Phoniatrica & Logopaedica. 2016; 68(1): 10–15.
Publications
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 25
Lu W, Cantor JB, Aurora RN, Gordon WA, Krellman JW, Nguyen M, Ashman TA, Spielman L, Ambrose AF. The relationship between self-reported sleep disturbance and polysomnography in individuals with traumatic brain injury. Brain Injury. 2015; 29: 1242–1350.
Lu W, Krellman JW, Dijkers M. Can cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia also treat fatigue, pain, and mood symptoms in individuals with traumatic brain injury? — A multiple case report. NeuroRehabilitation. 2016; 38: 59–69.
Luchsinger JA, Burgio L, Mittelman M, Dunner I, Levine JA, Kong J, Silver S, Ramirez M, Teresi JA. Northern Manhattan Hispanic Caregiver Intervention Effectiveness Study: protocol of a pragmatic randomised trial comparing the effectiveness of two established interventions for informal caregivers of persons with dementia. BMJ Open. 2016; 6(11): e014082.
Markos SM, Failla MD, Ritter AC, Dixon CE, Conley YP, Ricker JH, Arenth PM, Juengst SB, Wagner AK. Genetic variation in the vesicular monoamine transporter: Preliminary associations with cognitive outcomes after severe traumatic brain injury. Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation. 2016; epub ahead of print.
McKay TE, Balou M, Kao DJ, Ho DJ, Cohen J, Rodriguez ED. Poster 71: New Frontiers: Inpatient Comprehensive Rehabilitation After Full Face Transplantation: A Case Report. PM&R. 2016; 8(9S): S184.
Moroz A, Bang H. Predicting Performance on the American Board of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Written Examination Using Resident Self-Assessment Examination Scores. Journal of Graduate Medical Education. 2016; 8(1): 50–56.
Myrga JM, Failla MD, Ricker JH, Dixon CE, Conley YP, Arenth PM, Wagner AK. A Dopamine Pathway Gene Risk Score for Cognitive Recovery Following Traumatic Brain Injury: Methodological Considerations, Preliminary Findings, and Interactions With Sex. Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation. 2016; 31(5): E15–E29.
Phongtankuel V, Amorapanth PX, Siegler EL. Pain in the Geriatric Patient with Advanced Chronic Disease. Clinics in Geriatric Medicine. 2016; 32(4): 651–661.
Raghavan P, Geller D, Guerrero N, Aluru V, Eimicke JP, Teresi JA, Ogedegbe G, Palumbo A, Turry A. Music Upper Limb Therapy-Integrated: An Enriched Collaborative Approach for Stroke Rehabilitation. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 2016; 10: 498.
Raghavan P, Lu Y, Mirchandani M, Stecco A. Human Recombinant Hyaluronidase Injections For Upper Limb Muscle Stiffness in Individuals With Cerebral Injury: A Case Series. EBioMedicine. 2016; 9: 306–313.
Ritter AC, Wagner AK, Fabio A, Pugh MJ, Walker WC, Szaflarski JP, Zafonte RD, Brown AW, Hammond FM, Bushnik T, Johnson-Greene D, Shea T, Krellman JW, Rosenthal JA, Dreer LE. Incidence and risk factors of posttraumatic seizures following traumatic brain injury: A Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems Study. Epilepsia. 2016.
Ritter AC, Wagner AK, Szaflarski JP, Brooks MM, Zafonte RD, Pugh MJV, Fabio A, Hammond FM, Dreer LE, Bushnik T, Walker WC, Brown AW, Johnson-Greene D, Shea T, Krellman JW, Rosenthal JA. Prognostic models for predicting posttraumatic seizures during acute hospitalization, and at 1 and 2 years following traumatic brain injury. Epilepsia. 2016; 57(9): 1503–1514.
Rizzo JR, Hudson TE, Dai W, Birkemeier J, Pasculli RM, Selesnick I, Balcer LJ, Galetta SL, Rucker JC. Rapid number naming in chronic concussion: eye movements in the King-Devick test. Annals of Clinical & Translational Neurology. 2016; 3: 801–811.
Rizzo JR, Hudson TE, Dai W, Desai N, Yousefi A, Palsana D, Selesnick I, Balcer LJ, Galetta SL, Rucker JC. Objectifying eye movements during rapid number naming: Methodology for assessment of normative data for the King-Devick test. Journal of the Neurological Sciences. 2016; 362: 232–239.
Rubin JP, Gurtner GC, Liu W, March KL, Seppanen-Kaijansinkko R, Yaszemski MJ, Yoo JJ. Surgical Therapies and Tissue Engineering: At the Intersection Between Innovation and Regulation. Tissue Engineering Part A. 2016; 22(5-6): 397–400.
Sabari J, Capasso N, Feld-Glazman R. Optimizing motor planning and performance for clients with neurological disorders. In Radomski M and Trombly-Latham C. Occupational Therapy for Physical Dysfunction, 7th Ed. Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. 2015.
Siminovich-blok B, Portugal L. Is Reiki an effective addition to standard of care in an acute adult rehabilitation setting? Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation. 2016; Conference:(93rd).
Smith M, Long C, Bushnik T. Supporting factors for follow-up care in TBI patients post-inpatient discharge. Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation. 2016; Conference (93rd).
Stewart C, Riedel K. Managing Speech and Language Deficits after Stroke. In Gillen G (Ed.) Stroke Rehabilitation: A Function-Based Approach. St. Louis, Missouri: Elsevier. 2016.
Strober LB, Binder A, Nikelshpur OM, Chiaravalloti N, DeLuca J. The Perceived Deficits Questionnaire (PDQ): Perception, Deficit, or Distress? International Journal of MS Care. 2015; epub ahead of print.
Sumowski JF, Inglese M, Petracca M, Erlanger DM. BICAMS underestimates verbal memory impairment in MS patients: We propose a simple solution. Multiple Sclerosis. 2016; Conference: (32nd).
Tulsky DS, Kisala PA, Victorson D, Carlozzi N, Bushnik T, Sherer M, Choi SW, Heinemann AW, Chiaravalloti N, Sander AM, Englander J, Hanks R, Kolakowsky-Hayner S, Roth E, Gershon R, Rosenthal M, Cella D. TBI-QOL: Development and Calibration of Item Banks to Measure Patient Reported Outcomes Following Traumatic Brain Injury. Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation. 2016; 31(1): 40–51.
Vanlew S, Geller D, Feld-Glazman R, Capasso N, Dicembri A, Pinto Zipp G. Development and Preliminary Reliability of the Functional Upper Extremity Levels (FUEL). The American Journal of Occupational Therapy. 2015; 69(6): 69063350010.
Wang B, Prastawa M, Irimia A, Saha A, Liu W, Goh SYM, Vespa PM, Van Horn JD, Gerig G. Modeling 4D Pathological Changes by Leveraging Normative Models. Computer Vision & Image Understanding. 2016; 151: 3–13.
Posters
AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION ANNUAL ASSEMBLY 2015
Amorapanth PX, Raghavan P, Aluru V, Aronson M, Im B, Rath JF, Bilaloglu S. Physiologic mechanisms of emotional impairment in traumatic brain injury
AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION ANNUAL ASSEMBLY 2016
Alomar W. Unusual cause of myelopathy related to neurofibromatosis type 1: a case report
Bonte B, Freeman J, Fang G, Sauthoff H. Ultrasound guided diaphragmatic EMG in patient with respiratory decline and pre-existing contralateral diaphragm atrophy: a case report
Franzese K. Bilateral upper trunk plexopathy with a winged scapula: a case report
Franzese K, Kao DJ, Seo YI, Mandalaywala NV, Oak K, Moroz A. Electronic polling to measure resident education and work flow: a proposed method
Ho D, McKay T, Kao D. New frontiers: inpatient comprehensive rehabilitation after full face transplantation, a case report
Ho D, McKay T, Kao D. Teetering on the edge: rehabilitation in a medically complex patient with familial dysautonomia (hereditary sensory autonomic neuropathy type III), a case report
Kao DJ, Franzese K, Seo YI, Mandalaywala NV, Oak K, Moroz A, Espiritu T, Ho DJ. Evaluating burnout in physical medicine and rehabilitation residents
Kaul A, Franzese K. Ataxia and dysarthria secondary to Kufor-Rakeb syndrome in two siblings and their progression in outpatient rehabilitation: a case report
Mandalaywala NV, Seo YI, Fusco N. Management of acute baclofen withdrawal in the setting of intrathecal pump infection: a case report
Oak K, Kumar A. A novel presentation of acute motor axonal neuropathy: a case report
Pruski A, Shin R. Better functional outcome with acute inpatient rehabilitation—a case report of neurocysticercosis with devastating acute hospital course after initial presentation of hydrocephalus
Shalwala M. Bilateral symptomatic snapping knee from biceps femoris tendon subluxation—an atypical cause of bilateral knee pain: a case report
Shalwala M. Gait analysis after bilateral quadriceps tendon rupture in a patient who elected to be conservatively managed: a case report
Shalwala M. Myopathy, neuropathy, or both? A case report
AMERICAN BOARD OF REHABILITATION PSYCHOLOGY AND AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION DIVISION OF REHABILITATION PSYCHOLOGY ANNUAL CONFERENCE
Childs A, Long C, Ellois V, Smith J, Bertisch H, Lui Y, Rath JF. Postconcussive symptoms in the context of above-average neuropsychological test performance: no evidence for exaggerated complaints or suboptimal effort
26 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
Childs A, Rath JF, Barr W, Ricker JH. MMPI profiles of outpatients with mild traumatic brain injury: what’s the norm?
Ellois V, Long C, Childs A, Smith J, Bertisch H, Lui Y, Rath JF. TBI model systems defined problematic substance use in healthy controls: essential context for understanding substance use rates in mild TBI samples
Grunwald I, Gershon S. Psychological characteristics of outpatients with voice disorders: implications for rehabilitation
Kim S, Foley FW, Cavallo MM, Howard J, Rath JF, Dadon K, Kalina JT. A qualitative study of posttraumatic growth in partners of individuals with multiple sclerosis
Lindsey HM, Mercuri G, Lazar M, Rath JF, Bushnik T, Flanagan S, Voelbel GT. Changes in white matter integrity following neurorehabilitation: a diffusion tensor imaging study of adults with chronic traumatic brain injury
Long C, Gordon RM, Childs A, Ellois V, Bertisch H, Rath JF. Outcomes of the first APA-accredited predoctoral internship focusing on rehabilitation psychology
AMERICAN CONGRESS OF REHABILITATION MEDICINE ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2015
Childs A, Long C, Smith M, Ellois V, Smith-Wexler L, Bertisch H, Rath JF, Busknik T. Body mass index following traumatic brain injury: demographic and psychosocial variables at injury and one-year follow-up
Elliott CS, Kajankova M, Murray N, Lu W, Kaplan E, Dijkers M. Empirically-supported programs for caregivers of adults with traumatic brain injury: a systematic review
Glubo H, Fraser F, Creighton J, Lee CYS, Marks B, Matsuzawa Y, Trubetckaia O, Langenbahn D, Kingsley K. Group treatment for individuals with post-concussion syndrome: a pilot study of feasibility and initial efficacy
Hada E, Long C, Jenkins N, Childs A, Smith M, Bushnik T. First year follow-up of traumatic brain injury: effect of social integration on life satisfaction, depression, and anxiety
Jenkins N, Long C, Hada E, Childs A, Smith M, Bushnik T. First year follow-up of traumatic brain injury: effect of employment on life satisfaction, depression, and anxiety
Kim S, Rath JF, Zemon V, Cavallo MM, McCraty R, Sostre A, Foley FW. HRV biofeedback, TBI, and problem solving: the moderating effect of positive affect
Langenbahn D, Colantonio A, Constantinidou F. Survey of international interest in research collaboration among ACRM members
Matsuzawa Y, Lee CYS, Creighton J, Fraser F, Glubo H, Marks B, Trubetckaia O, Kingsley K, Langenbahn DM. Feasibility of psychoeducation and strategies group program for patients with concussion
AMERICAN CONGRESS OF REHABILITATION MEDICINE ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2016
Amorapanth P, Aluru V, Yousefi A, Tang A, Stone J, Cox S, Aronson M, Bilaloglu S, Lu Y, Rath JF, Im B, Raghavan P. Altered physiologic, but not subjective, responses to emotional stimuli
Cho YS, Sohlberg MM, Rath JF, Diller L. Exploring the psychosocial impact of Ekso Bionics Technology
Ellois V, Long C, Childs A, Smith J, Bertisch H, Amorapanth P, Lui Y, Rath JF. Relationships among slowed processing speed, emotional reactivity, and postconcussive symptoms in adults with mTBI
Fraser F, Matsuzawa Y, Lee C, Childs A, Barr W, MacAllister W, Ricker J. Gender differences in self-reported post-concussion symptoms
Juszczak M, Beattie A, Smith M, Nelson L, Maikos J, Bushnik T. A descriptive analysis of pain and psychosocial characteristics of civilian and veteran lower extremity amputees
Juszczak M, Beattie A, Smith M, Nelson L, Maikos J, Bushnik T. The influence of social support on functional outcomes and quality of life in lower limb amputees
Juszczak M, Bushnik T. Examining the effect of a powered exoskeleton on quality of life in people with spinal cord injury
Kim S, Foley FW, Cavallo MM, Howard J, Rath JF, Dadon K, Rimler Z, Kalina JT. Growth and benefit finding post trauma: a qualitative study of partners of individuals with multiple sclerosis
Kim S, Rath JF, Zemon V, Picone M, Portnoy JG, Foley FW. Cognitive status and employment in persons with multiple sclerosis: the effects of problem orientation
Langhammer B, Fugl-Meyer K, Sallstrom S, Sunnerhagen SK, Bushnik T, Stanghelle KJ. Activities of daily living and life satisfaction—what influence and predict outcomes? Sunnaas International Network (SIN) stroke study
Long C, Childs A, Ellois V, Smith J, Bertisch H, Lui Y, Rath JF. Gender differences in neuropsychological functioning following mild traumatic brain injury: implications for assessment and rehabilitation
Siminovich-blok B, Portugal L. Is Reiki an effective addition to standard of care in an acute adult rehabilitation setting?
Smith M, Long C, Bushnik T. Supporting factors for follow-up care in TBI patients post-inpatient discharge
Smith M, Reimann G, Long C, Siminovich-blok B, Bushnik T. A center-specific demographic analysis of barriers to retention in traumatic brain injury model systems (TBIMS) research
AMERICAN EPILEPSY SOCIETY ANNUAL CONFERENCE
Kucukboyaci NE, Leyden KM, Lee D, Girard H, Puckett O, Tecoma E, Iragui VJ, Bartsch H, McDonald CR. Post-surgical uncinate fasciculus diffusivity in TLE and its relationship to changes in executive function after ATL
AMERICAN NURSES ASSOCIATION CONFERENCE
De Claro L. Enhancing patient satisfaction through discharge follow-up phone calls on a neurological rehabilitation unit
AMERICAN OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY ASSOCIATION ANNUAL MEETING
Burns S, DelCorro-Cao J. Occupational therapy consideration for treating the neuro-oncology population on an adult inpatient rehab unit
Estrada I. Occupational performance based assessments
Evangelist M, Brown E, Fisher M. Delirium: prevention, identification, and interventions by rehabilitation therapists in the acute care setting
Finley B. Current concepts in evaluation and treatment of non-operative orthopedic shoulder pathology
Geller D, Vanlew S. Mirror therapy
Kearney O’Neill A, Kloczko E, Martori E, Vanlew S, Waskiewicz M. Full-time clinicians to adjunct professors: the mutual benefit from the classroom to the clinic
Magsombol C, Estrada I, Sheikovitz L. Diabetes management program in inpatient rehabilitation
Marino C. Occupational therapy interventions with Wallenberg Syndrome: a case study
McClelland K, Capasso N, Flumara E. Use my arm
Mouldovan T. Implementing an assistive technology program on an inpatient unit
Mouldovan T. Self-care success: OT improves function for lower limb amputee patients
Mouldovan T. Viewing the world through a telescope: strategies for treatment of Balint’s Syndrome
Rosenblum J, Finley B. Technology in hand therapy: current concepts in the use of applications for clinicians and clients
AMERICAN PHYSICAL THERAPY ASSOCIATION (APTA) COMBINED SECTIONS ANNUAL MEETING
Coppola N, Dack C. PT intervention for patient s/p antibiotic hip spacer with ICU acquired delirium
Finnen K, Weber K. Increasing physical therapist awareness of cardiovascular disease risk among people of South Asian descent
Finnen E, Weber K. Utility of the 5 meter walk test post transcatheter aortic valve replacement
Fischer M, Evangelist M, Brown E, Josef K, Herbsman J, Laverty P, Harb J. Prevention, identification and treatment of delirium: the role of the rehabilitation therapist
Frey C, Klein D. From Struggle to Success: Addressing cognitive and behavioral aspects of patient care in the physical therapy treatment of a young boy with acute disseminated encephalomyelitis
Frey C, Klein D. Optimizing participation and functional progress with physical therapy treatment for the acute care patient during a long term stay: a case study
Hincapie O, Elkins J, Vasquez-Welsh L. Proprioception retraining for a patient with chronic wrist pain secondary to ligament injury with no structural instability
Josef K, Fischer M. Development of a functional fall risk assessment tool for the acute care setting: a pilot study
Khalil N, Knopf L, Lam M. Assessment and management of a pediatric patient with conversion disorder: a case report
Khalil A, Shah K. Early mobilization of patients at high risk of vasospasm in the neurological intensive care unit: a case report
Laverty P, Keeler A, Rankel E. It’s only temporary: the benefits of early intensive physical therapy in a patient with SMA Syndrome
Academic Activities
Posters (cont.)
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 27
Matejovsky I. Stroke-related ataxia: the effect of coordination and balance training on a patient with acute cerebellar stroke
Newkirk M, Ramirez J. The effect of prolonged bed rest in acute care on a healthy 28 y/o female with multiple traumas due to a motor vehicle accident
APTA NEXT CONFERENCE & EXPOSITION
Fischer M, Evangelist M, Brown E, Josef K, Harb J. Prevention, identification and treatment of delirium: the role of the rehabilitation therapist
AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION ANNUAL CONVENTION
Avitia M, DeBiase E, Pagirsky M, Cross K, Knupp T. Differences in errors between students with language and reading disabilities
Wolfson J, Shreck E, Cercy S. Association between cognitive functioning and treatment adherence in primary care
AMERICAN SPEECH HEARING ASSOCIATION ANNUAL MEETING
Dobranski N. Stroke rehabilitation for English-language learners
Durkin A. The impact of visual impairments on orientation & memory following brain injury
Haddad A. Insomnia & aphasia recovery in a severe TBI
Houck K, D’sa I. Feel your food: an intensive sensory-motor feeding program
Schmidt J, Rabinowitz L. Age & language recovery during acute inpatient rehabilitation stay
Schmidt J, Rabinowitz L. Gender & language recovery during acute inpatient rehabilitation stay
Schmidt J, Rabinowitz L. Type of stroke & language recovery during acute inpatient rehabilitation stay
Singleton-Coyne M, Burns S. Role of speech-language pathologists in developing models of education for neuro-oncology patients
ASSOCIATION OF REHABILITATION NURSES CONFERENCE
De Claro L. Improving discharge planning from an acute neuroscience rehabilitation unit using a structured teaching approach
INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF PARKINSON’S DISEASE AND MOVEMENT DISORDERS ANNUAL MEETING
McCabe DL, Bono AD, Stafford RS, Dumer A, Scorpio KA, Spielman J, Bind R, Ramig LO, Borod JC. Facial expressivity in Parkinson’s disease (PD) via an examination of smiling behavior: preliminary findings
INTERNATIONAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL SOCIETY ANNUAL MEETING
Lee YSC, Matsuzawa Y, Creighton J, Fraser F, Glubo H, Kingsley K, Marks B, Trubetchkaia O, Langenbahn DM. Does psychoeducation promote recovery for patients with persistent concussion symptoms?
McCabe DL, Merker BM. Perceived value and feasibility of centralized scoring and research databases in the field of neuropsychology
NATIONAL REHABILITATION ASSOCIATION ANNUAL TRAINING CONFERENCE
Kvaternik K, Laster B, Lindsey R, Tran A. A case study of on the job interventions to maintain employment
NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES SYMPOSIUM ON SURGERY AND COGNITION: DELIRIUM, COGNITIVE DECLINE, AND OPPORTUNITIES TO PROTECT THE BRAIN
Langer KG, Jimenez AC. Unexpected cognitive difficulty is an important problem in the rehabilitation of the post-surgical patient
NEW YORK STATE SPEECH HEARING LANGUAGE ASSOCIATION
Dobranski, N. Aphasia in an English second language learner
Kane A, Schieber A. Feeding tube weaning for children with congenital cardiac anomalies
Tan T, Danziger K, Kane A. Progression of speaking valve tolerance in a child with craniofacial disorder
THE OBESITY SOCIETY ANNUAL MEETING
Childs A, Cervoni C, Loizos M, Swencionis C, Wylie-Rosett J. Frequency of use and perceived helpfulness of cognitive and behavioral coping strategies in a weight-loss intervention study
SOCIETY FOR ACUPUNCTURE RESEARCH
Siminovich-blok. B. Treating connective tissue disorders with acupuncture: the case for Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome
SOCIETY FOR NEUROSCIENCE
Bilaloglu S, Chakrabarty S, Lu Y, Yousefi A, Raghavan P. Plasticity in cortical control signals to muscles in pianists with overuse injury with peripheral behavioral intervention
Raghavan P, Lu Y, Bayona C, Bilaloglu S, Yousefi A, Tang A, Aluru V, Rangan A. Determination of treatment algorithms for patient subgroups for post-stroke hand function rehabilitation
Yousefi A, Bilaloglu S, Rizzo JR, Lu Y, Raghavan P. Gaze pattern differences inform hand posture to object shape during reach-to-grasp
SOCIETY OF BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE ANNUAL MEETING
Chiusano C, Anastasides N, Chelenza M, Friedlander M, Greenberg L, Helmer D, Litke D, Lu S, Petrakis BA, Pigeon W, Quigley K, Rath JF, Ray K, Santos S, McAndrew L. Protocol for randomized controlled trial of problem-solving therapy for Gulf War Illness
WORLD CONFERENCE OF THE INTERNATIONAL BRAIN INJURY ASSOCIATION
Hada E, Long C, Smith M, Im B, Bushnik T. Beyond the bars: traumatic brain injury and incarceration in America
Hada E, Long C, Smith M, Im B, Bushnik T, Flanagan S. The role of acculturation in rehabilitation outcomes
Rabinowitz L, Chung M, Laporte A. Transdisciplinary individualized patient protocols—a pilot study in inpatient neurorehabilitation
WORLD CONGRESS OF NEUROREHABILITATION
Aluru V, Ali SZ, Jin X, Dalsania R, Agrawal S, Raghavan P. Personalized robotic training for stroke rehabilitation
Raghavan P, Shalwala M, Lu Y, Stecco A. Human recombinant hyaluronidase injections for upper limb spasticity
Presentations
22ND ANNUAL INTERDISCIPLINARY STROKE COURSE
Raghavan P. Selecting the right treatment at the right time for the right person for restoration of arm and hand function post stroke
AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE & REHABILITATION
Alter K, Fusco H, Ketchum N, Levine J, Lin J, McGuire J, Pacheco M. Improving assessment and maximizing intervention options for patients with spasticity, dystonia, and related motor disorders
Balou M, Bartels M, Cohen J, O’Young B, Young M. Rehabilitation following organ transplantation: what EVERY physiatrist must know
Bansal A, Cohen J, Edelstein J, Moroz A. Pathological gait: an interactive workshop
Bernard K, Kim C, Portugal S, Sackheim K. Spine center surprises: unusual diagnoses presenting as typical spine syndromes
Caballes E, Stokes W. Knee and shoulder surgery: why or why not refer?
Fusco H, Levine J. Neuropharmacology in TBI: what we know and what we don’t
Khan S, Parkin K, Whiteson J. Physical medicine and rehabilitation as a driving force of value based medicine
Sweeney G, Whiteson J. Cardiac rehabilitation exemplifies the role of PM&R in value-based medicine: growth opportunities for medically-complex cardiac rehabilitation programs
AMERICAN BOARD OF REHABILITATION PSYCHOLOGY AND AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION DIVISION OF REHABILITATION PSYCHOLOGY ANNUAL CONFERENCE
Bertisch H. Problem orientation, mood, and related constructs in cognitive rehabilitation
Childs A, Rath JF, Barr WB, Ricker JH. MMPI profiles of outpatients with mild traumatic brain injury: what’s the norm?
Cho YS. Way finding when lost in the community: a help-seeking approach
Kim S, Zemon V, Cavallo MM, Rath JF, McCraty R, Ellois V, Foley FW. Heart rate variability biofeedback, self-regulation, and severe brain injury: a psychophysiological approach
Litke DR, McAndrew LM, Rath JF. Gulf War illness clinical trial: adapting problem solving and emotional self-regulation interventions for veterans with complex medical illness
28 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
Rath JF. Problem solving and emotional self-regulation approaches in outpatient cognitive rehabilitation: the evidence base, impact and extensions
AMERICAN CONGRESS OF REHABILITATION MEDICINE ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2015
Heinemann AW, Herrold AA, Kim S, Heyn PC, Ciro C. Progress and report of the ACRM Measurement Networking Group Applied Cognition Task Force (MNG ACTF)
Kingsley K, Hayner-Kolokowsky S, Vakil E, Constantinidou F. Cognitive reserve in healthy aging and long-term outcomes for individuals with brain injury
Kingsley K, O’Connell B, Vakil E, Armstrong J. Community integration for individuals with brain injury: a cross-cultural review of service delivery models
Smith-Wexler L. Disordered eating, weight, and physical activity concerns in rehabilitation outpatients with acquired brain injury
AMERICAN CONGRESS OF REHABILITATION MEDICINE ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2016
Adams J, Denham T, Flanagan S, Fraser F, Kothare S, Langenbahn D, Matsuzawa Y, Minen M, Pagnotta G, Palazzo M, Rizzo JR, Schneider E, Sproul M, Waskiewicz M. Concussion and the road to recovery: navigating obstacles, overcoming challenges, and striving for tailored multi-disciplinary care
Blum S, Voss J. Neuroplasticity of cognitive recovery after acquired brain injury
Childs A. MMPI profiles of adults with mild traumatic brain injury: what’s the norm?
Cicerone K, Dawson D, Langenbahn D, Yi A. Cognitive rehabilitation training
Hada E, Juszczak M, Long C, Smith M, Shagalow S, Bushnik T. A demographic analysis of the barriers and supporters of enrollment for traumatic brain injury model systems (TBIMS) research
Kim S, Hyn P, Takahaski Hoffecker L, Hu X, Mortera MH, Heinemann AW. Progress and report of the ACRM Measurement Networking Group Applied Cognition Task Force (MNG ACTF)
Mollayeva T, Bushnik T, Colantonio A. Fatigue, impaired alertness and daytime sleepiness in traumatic brain injury
Pape T, Monti M, Blum S. Leveraging neural mechanisms to promote plasticity during neurorehabilitation of patients in states of disorders of consciousness after severe brain injury
Pape T, Wasserman E, Sisto S, Janicak P, Cherney L, Madhavan S, Peters H, Ng K, Raghavan P, Page S. Neuroplasticity: leveraging principles of plasticity to optimize rehabilitation
Raghavan P. Leveraging Principles of Plasticity to Optimize Neurorehabilitation. Upper limb motor recovery post-stroke: is there a way forward?
AMERICAN CONGRESS OF REHABILITATION MEDICINE MID-YEAR MEETING APRIL 2016
Kingsley KTP. Cognitive rehabilitation of hemispatial neglect
Kingsley KTP. Cognitive rehabilitation of impairments of memory
AMERICAN OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY ASSOCIATION NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Castle K, Flaherty R. Topographical orientation skills: the path to community return
Cohen H. Addressing the needs of a progressive neurologic diagnosis through technology use
Geller D, Capasso N, Dicembri A, Feld-Glazman R, Vanlew S. Functional upper extremity levels (FUEL): a hierarchical classification tool for the neurological upper extremity
Waskiewicz M, Martori E, Sproul M. Interdisciplinary collaboration: OTs role in effectively treating concussion patients
AMERICAN PHYSICAL THERAPY ASSOCIATION (APTA) COMBINED SECTIONS MEETING
Corcoran J. Taught leadership 201: advanced leadership development
APTA NEXT CONFERENCE & EXPOSITION
Brown E, Evangelist M, Fischer M, Joseph K, Harb J. Deviating from the path: a roadmap for navigating delirium
AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION ANNUAL CONVENTION
Avitia M, Pagirsky M. Patterns of errors made by children with SLD versus ADHD
AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEURORADIOLOGY ANNUAL MEETING
Chung S, Fieremans E, Rath JF, Smith J, Flanagan S, Babb JS, Lui YW. Performance of complex tasks of working memory related to brain tissue microstructure: a diffusion kurtosis imaging study
AMERICAN SPEECH HEARING ASSOCIATION ANNUAL MEETING
Brown E, Fischer M, Evangelist M. DELIRIUM: prevention, identification, and intervention by rehab therapists
Kazachkov M, Tan T, Ashbaugh A. Pulmonary complications of aspiration and diagnostic techniques
ASIAN-AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION CONVENTION
Lee YSC. Amplifying leadership and building community: AAPA Leadership Fellows share their stories
ASOCIACION HISPANOAMERICANA DE ACUPUNTURA
Siminovich-blok B. Acupuncture for acute traumatic brain injury
BRAIN INJURY ASSOCIATION OF DELAWARE ANNUAL CONFERENCE
Connor FB, Stewart T. Welcome home, now what?
CANCER AND CAREERS NATIONAL CONFERENCE ON WORK & CANCER
Blacker D. Vocational rehab: improving your work ability
CRITICAL CARE REHAB CONFERENCE
Evangelist M, Gartenberg A. A toolkit for developing an occupational therapy program in the ICU
INTERNATIONAL LYME AND ASSOCIATED DISEASE SOCIETY ANNUAL EUROPEAN CONFERENCE
Shea L. Plenary session moderator
INTERNATIONAL LYME AND ASSOCIATED DISEASE SOCIETY ANNUAL SCIENTIFIC SESSION
Shea L. Pediatric neuropsychiatric Lyme/tick-borne diseases (session moderator)
INTERNATIONAL STROKE CONFERENCE
Raghavan P. Young stroke: changing the way we view stroke care in America—personalized rehabilitation for post-stroke relearning
MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL HOSPITAL—SPAULDING REHABILITATION HOSPITAL
Shea L. Neuropsychology and Lyme Disease (grand rounds)
MUSICARES HEALTHY ESSENTIALS PRESENTS VOCAL HEALTH
Grunwald I, Gherson S, Kim D, Redler B. This is your voice on anxiety in New York
NATIONAL REHABILITATION ASSOCIATION ANNUAL TRAINING CONFERENCE
Donroe L, Kvaternik K. Say goodbye to online job search: new strategies for 2016
NEURO- AND MIND SCIENCES CONFERENCE
Starshinina A, Kucukboyaci NE. Brains and bodies: reading bodily movements as signs of brain pathology
NEW YORK STATE SPEECH HEARING LANGUAGE ASSOCIATION
Brown E, Fischer M, Evangelist M. DELIRIUM prevention, identification & intervention by rehab therapists
NORTH AMERICAN BRAIN INJURY SOCIETY ANNUAL CONFERENCE
Lee YSC. Feasibility of group intervention for concussed patients in the early stage of recovery
REHABILITATION MEDICINE DEPARTMENT, GOTHENBURG UNIVERSITY, SWEDEN
Langenbahn D. Evidence-based treatment of hemispatial neglect and social communication
TECHNOLOGY FOR SUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENT OF DISABILITY
Raghavan P. Imagining the possible: digital innovation, community, health and rehabilitation medicine
WORLD STROKE CONGRESS
Raghavan P: Creating an enriched rehabilitation environment in a low-resource setting
Academic Activities
Presentations (cont.)
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 29
Locations
1 Ambulatory Care Center240 East 38th Street, New York, NY
2
NYU Langone Medical Center Main Campus550 First Avenue, New York, NY
3
Hospital for Joint Diseases301 East 17th Street, New York, NY
4
NYU Langone Levit Medical (two locations)
4a
1300 Avenue P, Brooklyn, NY
4b
1902 86th Street, Brookly n, NY
5
Columbus Medical97-85 Queens Boulevard, Queens, NY
6
Center for Musculoskeletal Care333 East 38th Street, New York, NY
7
Preston Robert Tisch Center for Men’s Health555 Madison Avenue, New York, NY
8
Joan H. Tisch Center for Women’s Health 207 East 84th Street, New York, NY
9
NYU Lutheran Medical Center 150 55th Street, Brooklyn, NY
10
NYU Lutheran Rehabilitation (four locations)
10a
5008 7th Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
10b
9000 Shore Road, East Building, Lower Level Brooklyn, NY
10c
5610 Second Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
10d
230 60th Street, Brooklyn, NY
11
NYU Lutheran Augustana Center for Extended Care and Rehabilitation5434 2nd Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
Rusk Rehabilitation
NYU Langone Medical CenterFor more information about our locations, visit, nyulangone.org/locations
MANHATTAN
BRONX
NJ
STATENISLAND
QUEENS
WESTCHESTER
CT
BROOKLYN
5
4b4a
5
87
6
3
1
9 1110a
X
10c10d
10b
2
Lorem ipsum
Long Island
6 additional locations in Westchester
2 additional locations in New Jersey
1 additional location in
Staten Island
8 additional locations in
30 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
Leadership
Senior Leadership
Steven R. Flanagan, MDHoward A. Rusk Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine Professor of Pathology
Chair of the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine
Medical Director, Rusk Rehabilitation
David A. Dibner, MPH, FACHE Senior Vice President for HJD Hospital Operations and Musculoskeletal Strategic Area
Alex Moroz, MD Associate Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Vice Chair for Clinical Affairs
Kate Parkin, PT, DPT, MA Clinical Assistant Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine and Physical Therapy
Senior Director, Therapy Services
Jonathan H. Whiteson, MD Assistant Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Vice Chair of Clinical Operations
Physician Leadership
Jung Hwan Ahn, MD Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Medical Director of Inpatient Rehabilitation Medicine
Jeffrey M. Cohen, MDProfessor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Director, Medically Complex Rehabilitation
Joan T. Gold, MDProfessor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Director, Pediatric Rehabilitation Program
Brian Sung-Hoon Im, MDAssistant Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Director, Brain Injury
Ira G. Rashbaum, MD Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Medical Director, Tension Myoneural Syndrome (TMS) and Mind-Body Medicine
Wayne Stokes, MDAssociate Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Director, Sports Medicine Rehabilitation
Renat Sukhov, MDAssociate Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Associate Medical Director, Pediatric Rehabilitation Service
Nursing Leadership
Kimberly S. Glassman, PhD, RN, NEA-BC Senior Vice President, Patient Care Services Chief Nursing Officer
Nancy Rodenhausen, RN Vice President, Nursing & Patient Care Services
Ann Vanderberg, RNVice President, Nursing, Hospital for Joint Diseases
Mary Ann Loftus, RNClinical Director of Nursing Rehabilitation
Rusk Physicians
Prin Amorapanth, MD, PhD
Craig Antell, DO
Amit Bansal, DO
Louis Dizon, MD
Jason Fritzhand, MD
Jason Freeman, DO
Heidi Fusco, MD
Parul Jajoo, DO
Arthur Jimenez, MD
Robert Kaylakov, MD
Charles Kim, MD
Dallas Kingsbury, MD
Gavriil Ilizarov, DO
RUSK REHABILITATION 2016 / NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 31
Valery Lanyi, MD
Wei Angela Liu, MD
Vladimir Onefater, MD
Nanwai A. Pak, MD
Salvador E. Portugal, DO
Sofiya Prilik, MD
Kimberly Ann Sackheim, DO
Naheed A. Van de Walle, MD
Research Leadership
Tamara Bushnik, PhD, FACRMAssociate Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Director, Inter-Hospital Research and Knowledge Translation
Preeti Raghavan, MDAssistant Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Vice Chair of Research
John-Ross Rizzo, MDAssistant Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Director, Visuomotor Integration Laboratory (VMIL)
Director, Technology Translation in Medicine Laboratory (TTML)
Clinical and Site Leadership
Vincent Cavallaro, PTVice President of Neurology and Rehabilitation, NYU Lutheran
John R. Corcoran, DPTClinical Assistant Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Site Director, Tisch Hospital
Ora Ezrachi, PhDClinical Assistant Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Director, Outcomes Management
Safia Khan, MS, MPADivisional Administrator
Owen Kieran, MDClinical Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Director of Rehabilitation Medicine, Bellevue Hospital Center
Robert J. Lindsey, MA, CRC, LMHCDirector, Vocational Rehabilitation
Debbie Newman, MA, ORT/LSite Administrator, Center for Musculoskeletal Care
Dina L. Pagnotta, MPT, MPHDirector of Strategic Initiatives
Mary R. Reilly, MS, CCC-SLPClinical Director, Speech Language Pathology
Rhonda Reininger, MA, OTRDirector, Rehabilitation Compliance
Joseph Ricker, PhD, ABPPProfessor of Rehabilitation Medicine and Psychiatry
Director, Rusk Psychology
Nicole Sasson, MDClinical Associate Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Director of Rehabilitation Medicine, Veteran Affairs-New York Harbor Healthcare System
Angela M. Stolfi, DPTClinical Instructor
Clinical Director, Physical Therapy Site Director for Ambulatory Services
Maria Cristina Tafurt, MA, OTR/L, ABDClinical Assistant Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine
Site Director, Hospital for Joint Diseases
Monica TietsworthDepartment Administrator
Steve F. Vanlew, MS, OTR/LClinical Director, Occupational Therapy
32 NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER / RUSK REHABILITATION 2016
Leadership
New York University
William R. BerkleyChair, Board of Trustees
Andrew Hamilton, PhDPresident
Robert Berne, MBA, PhDExecutive Vice President for Health
NYU Langone Medical Center
Kenneth G. LangoneChair, Board of Trustees
Robert I. Grossman, MDSaul J. Farber Dean and Chief Executive Officer
Steven B. Abramson, MDSenior Vice President and Vice Dean for Education, Faculty, and Academic Affairs
Dafna Bar-Sagi, PhDSenior Vice President and Vice Dean for Science, Chief Scientific Officer
Andrew W. Brotman, MDSenior Vice President and Vice Dean for Clinical Affairs and Strategy, Chief Clinical Officer
Michael T. BurkeSenior Vice President and Vice Dean, Corporate Chief Financial Officer
Richard Donoghue Senior Vice President for Strategy, Planning, and Business Development
Annette Johnson, JD, PhDSenior Vice President and Vice Dean, General Counsel
Grace Y. KoSenior Vice President for Development and Alumni Affairs
Kathy LewisSenior Vice President for Communications and Marketing
Joseph LhotaSenior Vice President and Vice Dean, Chief of Staff
Vicki Match Suna, AIASenior Vice President and Vice Dean for Real Estate Development and Facilities
Nader MherabiSenior Vice President and Vice Dean, Chief Information Officer
Robert A. Press, MD, PhDSenior Vice President and Vice Dean, Chief of Hospital Operations
Nancy SanchezSenior Vice President and Vice Dean for Human Resources and Organizational Development and Learning
NYU Langone By the Numbers*
4,381Original Research Papers**
550,500Square Feet of Research Space
$334MNIH Funding
$328MTotal Grant Revenue
1,519Beds
100Operating Rooms
145,907Emergency Room Visits
68,602Patient Discharges
3,850,000Outpatient Faculty Practice Visits
9,649Births
3,584Physicians
4,899Nurses
574MD Candidates
80MD/PhD Candidates
233PhD Candidates
397Postdoctoral Fellows
1,472Residents and Fellows
*Numbers represent FY16 (Sept 2015–Aug 2016) and include NYU Lutheran **Calendar year 2015
1 MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR
2 FACTS & FIGURES
4 NEW & NOTEWORTHY
8 TRANSLATIONAL CLINICAL CARE
9 Rehabilitation’s Role in Value Based Medicine
12 Novel Treatment for Post-Stroke Muscle Stiffness
14 Rehabilitation Following Groundbreaking Face Transplant
16 Neuromodulation to Treat Shoulder Pain
18 Early Mobilization in the PICU
20 Brain Injury Research
23 Complex Case: NSTEMI Patient
24 ACADEMIC ACTIVITIES
29 LOCATIONS
30 LEADERSHIP
Contents
Produced by the Office of Communications and Marketing, NYU Langone Medical Center Writer: Robert Fojut Design: Ideas On Purpose, www.ideasonpurpose.com Photography: Maria Aufmuth/TED; Karsten Moran Printing: Allied Printing Services, Inc.
On the cover: Micro image of muscle fibers
NYU LANGONE MEDICAL CENTER 550 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016
NYULANGONE.ORG
37%INCREASE IN
OUTPATIENT VISITS
TOP 10IN U.S. NEWS &
WORLD REPORT
ADVANCING VALUE BASED
MEDICINE
Rusk Rehabilitation
2016 / YEAR IN REVIEW