
Proceedings Paper
Application of laser therapy in treating inherited forms of psychoverbal retardation in childrenFormat | Member Price | Non-Member Price |
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Paper Abstract
An investigation was made of applying combined laser therapy in the treatment of 619 children (422 children constituted the experimental group and 197 children composed the control group) affected by inherited forms of psychoverbal retardation. It was found that low-intensity He-Ne laser radiation with the wavelength of 632.8 nm and the output power of 2 mW made it possible to improve the children's mental development. Moreover, it effectively increased their mental activities, such as speech, communication, arbitrary behavior regulation, and locomotory functions. Laser therapy applied in treating children affected by the arrested mental development aggravated by obesity additionally decreased their body weight, increased their field of vision, and eliminated dyslipidemia. It was also found that contraindications to He-Ne laser acupuncture included phenylketonuria-related noncorrected metabolic defects, convulsive syndromes, epileptic activities, convulsive readiness, and cerebrolysine intramuscular injections.
Paper Details
Date Published: 26 April 2001
PDF: 6 pages
Proc. SPIE 4422, Low-Level Laser Therapy, (26 April 2001); doi: 10.1117/12.425526
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 4422:
Low-Level Laser Therapy
Tatiana I. Solovieva, Editor(s)
PDF: 6 pages
Proc. SPIE 4422, Low-Level Laser Therapy, (26 April 2001); doi: 10.1117/12.425526
Show Author Affiliations
V. Yu. Ulas, Moscow Research Institute of Pediatrics and Children's Surgery (Russia)
V. M. Voinova, Moscow Research Institute of Pediatrics and Children's Surgery (Russia)
L. B. Il'in, Moscow Research Institute of Pediatrics and Children's Surgery (Russia)
V. M. Voinova, Moscow Research Institute of Pediatrics and Children's Surgery (Russia)
L. B. Il'in, Moscow Research Institute of Pediatrics and Children's Surgery (Russia)
L. A. Troitskaya, Moscow Research Institute of Pediatrics and Children's Surgery (Russia)
E. V. Dobrynina, Moscow Research Institute of Pediatrics and Children's Surgery (Russia)
L. Z. Kazantseva, Moscow Research Institute of Pediatrics and Children's Surgery (Russia)
E. V. Dobrynina, Moscow Research Institute of Pediatrics and Children's Surgery (Russia)
L. Z. Kazantseva, Moscow Research Institute of Pediatrics and Children's Surgery (Russia)
Published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 4422:
Low-Level Laser Therapy
Tatiana I. Solovieva, Editor(s)
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