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Dive into the research topics where Blanka Adamová is active.

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Featured researches published by Blanka Adamová.


European Spine Journal | 2000

Conservative treatment versus surgery in spondylotic cervical myelopathy: a prospective randomised study

Zdeněk Kadaňka; Josef Bednařík; Stanislav Voháňka; Otto Vlach; Lubor Stejskal; Richard Chaloupka; Dagmar Filipovičová; Dagmar Šurelová; Blanka Adamová; Oldřich Novotný; Martin Němec; Vladimír Smrčka; Igor Urbánek

Abstract A prospective randomised 2-year study was performed to compare the conservative and operative treatment of mild and moderate forms of spondylotic cervical myelopathy (SCM). Forty-eight patients presenting with the clinical syndrome of SCM, with a modified Japanese Orthopaedic Association (mJOA) score of 12 points or more, were randomised into two groups. Group A, treated conservatively, consisted of 27 patients, mean age 55.6 ± 8.6 years, while group B was treated surgically (21 patients, mean age 52.7 ± 8.1 years). The clinical outcome was measured by the mJOA score, recovery rate (RR), timed 10 m walk, score of daily activities (recorded by video and evaluated by two observers blinded to the therapy), and by the subjective assessment of the patients at 6, 12, and 24 months of the follow-up. There was, on average, no significant deterioration in mJOA score, recovery ratio, or timed 10 m walk within either group during the 2 years of follow-up. In the surgery group there was a slight decline in the scores for daily activities and subjective evaluation. A comparison of the two groups showed no significant differences in changes over time in mJOA score or quantified gait, but there were significant differences in the score of daily activities recorded by video at 24 months, which was a little lower in the surgical group, and also in RR and subjective evaluation, which were both worse in the surgical group at months 12 and 24. However, at month 6, this last parameter was significantly better in the surgical than in conservative group. Surgical treatment of mild and moderate forms of SCM in the present study design, comprising the patients with no or very slow, insidious progression and a relatively long duration of symptoms, did not show better results than conservative treatment over the 2-year follow-up.


European Spine Journal | 2003

Differential diagnostics in patients with mild lumbar spinal stenosis: the contributions and limits of various tests

Blanka Adamová; S. Vohanka; Ladislav Dušek

Abstract. Lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) and diabetic polyneuropathy are common ailments of older age. Many people suffer from both at the same time. In such patients it may sometimes be difficult to separate signs and symptoms that could be attributed to either disease. This study evaluates the contributions and limits of various tests, especially the exercise treadmill test (ETT) and electrophysiological examination, in the diagnostics of patients with mild LSS. Twenty-nine patients with mild LSS documented by computed tomography (CT) participated in this study. Sixteen of the patients had neurogenic claudication (LSS NC+), and 13 patients did not (LSS NC–). Patients with LSS were compared with a group of 24 patients with diabetic polyneuropathy and 25 healthy volunteers. The distance covered, the time spent walking and the reasons for preliminary termination of the ETT were evaluated in all groups. Initial electrophysiological examination included electromyography (EMG) from the upper and lower extremities and motor evoked potentials (MEPs) to the lower extremities. LSS NC+ patients covered a significantly shorter distance and the time spent walking was significantly shorter than in LSS NC– patients and in the two control groups. The main reason for preliminary termination of the ETT was the development of NC in 67% of the LSS NC+ patients. In contrast, no LSS NC– patient and none from the control groups revealed NC, but 31% of LSS NC– patients were not able to finish the ETT for other reasons (e.g. dyspnoea). Electrophysiological parameters evaluated from the upper extremities distinguished diabetic patients from LSS patients. The latencies of the tibial F-wave, soleus H-reflex and spinal MEP response reliably distinguished healthy volunteers from diabetic patients and LSS patients, and particularly LSS patients from diabetic patients. The chronodispersion of the tibial F-wave distinguished LSS NC+ patients from the other groups. The results of the study show that electrophysiological examination contributes to the differential diagnostics between mild lumbar spinal stenosis and diabetic polyneuropathy. The contribution of electrophysiological methods in verification of NC in LSS patients is limited (chronodispersion of the tibial F-wave only). The ETT is useful in confirmation of NC and walking capacity verification, but restriction of walking capacity should be carefully analysed.


European Spine Journal | 2005

Dynamic electrophysiological examination in patients with lumbar spinal stenosis: Is it useful in clinical practice?

Blanka Adamová; S. Vohanka; Ladislav Dušek

Neurogenic claudication (NC) is typical of lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS). One suspected pathophysiological mechanism underlying NC is intermittent hypoxia of cauda equina fibres resulting from venous pooling, which may lead to ischaemic nerve conduction failure and to transient clinical and electrophysiological changes after exercise. The aim of this study was to evaluate the appearance of significant transient electrophysiological abnormalities after walking exercise in patients with LSS and to establish the contribution of dynamic electrophysiological examination in the differential diagnostics of patients with LSS. The study participants were 36 consecutive patients with LSS demonstrated by computed tomography (CT). The control groups included, respectively, 28 patients with diabetes mellitus and clinically manifested polyneuropathy, and 32 healthy volunteers. The LSS patients were divided into four subgroups based on the clinical severity of the disease (with respect to the presence or absence of NC in the history and pareses on neurological examination). Soleus H-reflex, tibial F-wave and motor evoked potentials (MEPs) to abductor hallucis muscle were examined in all groups, before and after quantified walking on a treadmill. The electrophysiological parameters measured after an exercise treadmill test (ETT) in LSS patients and in both control groups were compared with the same parameters obtained before ETT. The study shows that the electrophysiological parameters reveal minimal but statistically significant changes after walk loading in patients with LSS (a prolongation of the minimal latency of the tibial F-wave and of the latency of the soleus H-reflex). The changes in these parameters were demonstrated not only in patients with NC but also in patients without NC. More pronounced changes were found in LSS patients exhibiting chronic lower extremity pareses. Conclusions: From among a large battery of electrophysiological tests, only the minimal latency of the tibial F-wave and the latency of the soleus H-reflex exhibit changes after walk loading in patients with LSS. These are minimal but statistically significant. Dynamic electrophysiological examination can illustrate the pathophysiology of NC in LSS, but from a practical point of view its contribution to the differential diagnostics of LSS or diabetic polyneuropathy is limited by an absence of established cut-off values.


Muscle & Nerve | 2015

Small-nerve-fiber pathology in critical illness documented by serial skin biopsies

Miroslav Skorna; Roman Kopáčik; Eva Vlčková; Blanka Adamová; Milena Kostalova; Josef Bednarik

Introduction: Small‐fiber pathology can develop in the acute phase of critical illness and may explain chronic sensory impairment and pain in critical care survivors. Methods: Eleven adult ischemic stroke patients in a neurocritical care unit were enrolled in an observational cohort study. Intraepidermal nerve fiber density (IENFD) in the distal leg was assessed on admission to the intensive care unit and 10–14 days later, together with electrophysiological testing. Results: Of the 11 patients recruited, 9 (82%) had sepsis or multiple‐organ failure. Median IENFD on admission (5.05 fibers/mm) decreased significantly to 2.18 fibers/mm (P < 0.001), and abnormal IENFD was found in 6 patients (54.5%). Electrodiagnostic signs of large‐fiber neuropathy and/or myopathy were found in 6 patients (54.5%), and autonomic dysfunction was found in 2 patients (18.2%). Conclusion: Serial IENFD measurements confirmed the development of small‐fiber sensory involvement in the acute phase of critical illness. Muscle Nerve 52: 28–33, 2015


Brain and behavior | 2017

Predictors of symptomatic myelopathy in degenerative cervical spinal cord compression

Zdenek Kadanka; Blanka Adamová; Milos Kerkovsky; Ladislav Dušek; Barbora Jurová; Eva Vlčková; Josef Bednarik

To update a previously established list of predictors for neurological cervical cord dysfunction in nonmyelopathic degenerative cervical cord compression (NMDCCC).


Pain | 2017

Sensory phenotype and risk factors for painful diabetic neuropathy: a cross-sectional observational study

Jana Raputová; Iva Šrotová; Eva Vlčková; Claudia Sommer; Nurcan Üçeyler; Frank Birklein; Heike L. Rittner; Cora Rebhorn; Blanka Adamová; Ivana Kovalova; Eva Králíčková Nekvapilová; Lucas Forer; Jana Belobradkova; Jindrich Olsovsky; Pavel Weber; Ladislav Dušek; Jiri Jarkovsky; Josef Bednarik

Abstract Different sensory profiles in diabetic distal symmetrical sensory-motor polyneuropathy (DSPN) may be associated with pain and the responsiveness to analgesia. We aimed to characterize sensory phenotypes of patients with painful and painless diabetic neuropathy and to assess demographic, clinical, metabolic, and electrophysiological parameters related to the presence of neuropathic pain in a large cohort of well-defined DSPN subjects. This observational cross-sectional multi-center cohort study (performed as part of the ncRNAPain EU consortium) of 232 subjects with nonpainful (n = 74) and painful (n = 158) DSPN associated with diabetes mellitus of type 1 and 2 (median age 63 years, range 21-87 years; 92 women) comprised detailed history taking, laboratory tests, neurological examination, quantitative sensory testing, nerve conduction studies, and neuropathy severity scores. All parameters were analyzed with regard to the presence and severity of neuropathic pain. Neuropathic pain was positively correlated with the severity of neuropathy and thermal hyposensitivity (P < 0.001). A minority of patients with painful DSPN (14.6%) had a sensory profile, indicating thermal hypersensitivity that was associated with less severe neuropathy. Neuropathic pain was further linked to female sex and higher cognitive appraisal of pain as assessed by the pain catastrophizing scale (P < 0.001), while parameters related to diabetes showed no influence on neuropathic pain with the exception of laboratory signs of nephropathy. This study confirms the value of comprehensive DSPN phenotyping and underlines the importance of the severity of neuropathy for the presence of pain. Different sensory phenotypes might be useful for stratification of patients with painful DSPN for analgesic treatment and drug trials.


Ceska A Slovenska Neurologie A Neurochirurgie | 2015

Radiologic Assessment of Lumbar Spinal Stenosis and its Clinical Correlation

Blanka Adamová; Marek Mechl; Tereza Andrašinová; Josef Bednařík

Lumbar spinal stenosis is a clinical-radiological syndrome; a recent defi nition covers both the clinical manifestation and the anatomic abnormality (narrowing of the spinal canal). Magnetic resonance imaging is suggested as the most appropriate non-invasive test to confi rm the presence of anatomic narrowing of the spinal canal or the presence of nerve root impingement in patients with clinical suspicion of lumbar spinal stenosis. Many numerical parameters describing the dimensions of spinal canal have been defi ned for more precise assessment of radiological images; correlation between these radiological parameters and clinical symptoms, however, is unsatisfactory. To improve the usefulness of radiological imaging in patients with lumbar spinal stenosis, it seems to be meaningful to take into account the dynamic aspect of lumbar spinal stenosis and to assess neural and vascular tissue impingement based on morphology of the dural sac and its content.


Scripta Medica | 2009

The results and contribution of electrophysiological examination in patients with lumbar spinal stenosis

Blanka Adamová; Stanislav Voháňka


European Spine Journal | 2015

Outcomes and their predictors in lumbar spinal stenosis: a 12-year follow-up

Blanka Adamová; S. Vohanka; Ladislav Dušek; Jiri Jarkovsky; Richard Chaloupka; Josef Bednarik


Ceska A Slovenska Neurologie A Neurochirurgie | 2015

Asymp­tomatic Spondylotic Cervical Cord Compression

Ivana Kovalova; Josef Bednařík; Miloš Keřkovský; Blanka Adamová; Zdeněk Kadaňka

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Eva Vlčková

Central European Institute of Technology

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Mária Hnojčíková

Central European Institute of Technology

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Josef Bednarik

Central European Institute of Technology

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