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Dive into the research topics where Marga Tepper is active.

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Featured researches published by Marga Tepper.


Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine | 2013

SECONDARY HEALTH CONDITIONS IN PERSONS WITH SPINAL CORD INJURY: A LONGITUDINAL STUDY FROM ONE TO FIVE YEARS POST-DISCHARGE

Jacinthe J. E. Adriaansen; Marcel W. M. Post; Sonja de Groot; Floris W. A. van Asbeck; Janneke M. Stolwijk-Swuste; Marga Tepper; Eline Lindeman

OBJECTIVE To assess the occurrence of secondary health conditions and their potential risk factors in persons with spinal cord injury from 1 to 5 years after discharge from initial inpatient rehabilitation. DESIGN Multicentre longitudinal study. SUBJECTS A total of 139 wheelchair-dependent persons with spinal cord injury. METHODS The occurrence of secondary health conditions and their potential risk factors were assessed in a clinical interview with a rehabilitation physician at 1 and 5 years after discharge from inpatient rehabilitation and by a telephone interview 2 years after discharge. Self-report questionnaires were used for the assessment of musculoskeletal and neuropathic pain. RESULTS Neuropathic pain (83.7-92.1%), musculoskeletal pain (62.3-87.1%) and urinary tract infection (56.5-58.9%) were the most frequently reported secondary health conditions. The occurrence of several secondary health conditions was higher among women and individuals with a complete lesion, tetraplegia, and with a higher body mass index. CONCLUSION Secondary health conditions are common in the first years post-discharge following spinal cord injury, and their course seems to be relatively stable. These results emphasize the number of health issues that must be considered during post-injury care of persons with spinal cord injury living in the community, and the importance of a well-coordinated interdisciplinary approach from specialized rehabilitation centres.


Rehabilitation Research and Practice | 2011

Recovery of Motor Imagery Ability in Stroke Patients

Sjoerd de Vries; Marga Tepper; Bert Otten; Theo Mulder

Objective. To investigate whether motor imagery ability recovers in stroke patients and to see what the relationship is between different types of imagery and motor functioning after stroke. Methods. 12 unilateral stroke patients were measured at 3 and 6 weeks poststroke on 3 mental imagery tasks. Arm-hand function was evaluated using the Utrecht Arm-Hand task and the Brunnström Fugl-Meyer Scale. Age-matched healthy individuals (N = 10) were included as controls. Results. Implicit motor imagery ability and visual motor imagery ability improved significantly at 6 weeks compared to 3 weeks poststroke. Conclusion. Our study shows that motor imagery can recover in the first weeks after stroke. This indicates that a group of patients who might not be initially selected for mental practice can, still later in the rehabilitation process, participate in mental practice programs. Moreover, our study shows that mental imagery modalities can be differently affected in individual patients and over time.


International Journal of Rehabilitation Research | 2012

Using the Hand Laterality Judgement Task to assess motor imagery: a study of practice effects in repeated measurements.

Anne M. Boonstra; Sjoerd de Vries; Evelien Veenstra; Marga Tepper; W.J. Feenstra; Egbert Otten

The aim of this study was to determine whether there is a practice effect on the Hand Laterality Judgement Task (HLJT). The HLJT task is a mental rotation task that can be used to assess motor imagery ability in stroke patients. Thirty-three healthy individuals performed the HLJT and two control tasks twice at a 3-week interval. Differences in the accuracy and the response times were analysed. The results for all three tasks showed a decrease in the response time between the first and the second assessments (8–20%), and, for the HLJT, also a small (3%) but relevant increase in accuracy. The most likely factor explaining this improvement is that of practice effects. This implies that an improvement in the HLJT scores found over time in clinical research may be partly because of a learning effect, which has to be taken into account when interpreting the results. It is likely that a practice effect occurs in repeated measurements of the HLJT.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2013

Motor imagery ability in stroke patients: the relationship between implicit and explicit motor imagery measures

Sjoerd de Vries; Marga Tepper; W.J. Feenstra; Hanneke Oosterveld; Anne M. Boonstra; Bert Otten

There is little consensus on how motor imagery ability should be measured in stroke patients. In particular it is unclear how two methods tapping different aspects of the motor imagery process relate to each other. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between implicit and explicit motor imagery ability by comparing performance of stroke patients and controls on a motor imagery questionnaire and a hand laterality judgment task (HLJT). Sixteen ischemic stroke patients (36 ± 13 weeks post-stroke) and 16 controls, matched by age (51 ± 10 years), gender (7 females) and handedness (3 left-handed), performed a HLJT and completed a motor imagery questionnaire. Our study shows that neither in the healthy controls nor in patients, a correlation is found between the HLJT and the motor imagery questionnaire. Although the patient group scored significantly lower than the control group on the visual motor imagery component (U = 60; p = 0.010) and the kinesthetic motor imagery component (U = 63.5; p = 0.015) of the questionnaire, there were no significant differences between patients and controls on accuracy scores of the HLJT. Analyses of the reaction time profiles of patients and controls showed that patient were still able to use an implicit motor imagery strategy in the HLJT task. Our results show that after stroke performance on tests that measure two different aspects of motor imagery ability, e.g., implicit and explicit motor imagery, can be differently affected. These results articulate the complex relation phenomenological experience and the different components of motor imagery have and caution the use of one tool as an instrument for use in screening, selecting and monitoring stroke patients in rehabilitation settings.


Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine | 2015

Wheelchair-Specific Fitness of Inactive People with Long-Term Spinal Cord Injury

Jan W. van der Scheer; Sonja de Groot; Marga Tepper; David Gobets; DirkJan Veeger; Lucas H. V. van der Woude

OBJECTIVES To describe wheelchair-specific anaerobic work capacity, isometric strength and peak aerobic work capacity of physically inactive people with long-term spinal cord injury using outcomes of tests that are feasible for use in rehabilitation centres, and to determine associations among these fitness components. DESIGN Cross-sectional study. PARTICIPANTS Manual wheelchair users with spinal cord injury for at least 10 years, who were inactive based on a norm score of a physical activity questionnaire (n = 29; 22 men; 20 with paraplegia; median age 53 years). METHODS Participants performed 3 exercise tests in their own wheelchair to determine: highest 5-s power output over 15-m overground sprinting (P5-15m); highest 3-s isometric push-force (Fiso); and peak power output (POpeak) and peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak) over a peak test. RESULTS Median (interquartile range) was in P5-15m 16.1 W (9.4-20.9); in Fiso 399 N (284-610); in POpeak 40.9 W (19.1-54.9); and in VO2peak 1.26 l/min (0.80-1.67). Correlations among outcomes of fitness components were weak (r = 0.50-0.67, p < 0.01), except for P5-15m with POpeak (r = 0.79, p < 0.001). CONCLUSION All fitness components measured in this sample were at relatively low levels, implying a specific need for interventions to improve wheelchair-specific fitness. The weak-to-moderate associations among components imply that separate tests should be used when monitoring wheelchair-specific fitness in rehabilitation centres.


Spinal Cord | 2017

Associations between disability-management self-efficacy, participation and life satisfaction in people with long-standing spinal cord injury

A Cijsouw; Jacinthe J. E. Adriaansen; Marga Tepper; C A Dijksta; S. van der Linden; S. de Groot; Marcel W. M. Post

Objectives:To study disability-management self-efficacy (DMSE) and its correlates in a large sample of Dutch people with long-standing spinal cord injury (SCI). DMSE is the confidence that people with SCI may have in their ability to manage the consequences of their condition with respect to the various domains in their life. Research questions were: (1) What is the level of DMSE in Dutch people with long-standing SCI?; (2) Is DMSE associated with demographic and lesion characteristics?; and (3) Is DMSE associated with participation and life satisfaction if these associations are adjusted for demographic and lesion characteristics and mood?Methods:Eligible people were identified from all eight rehabilitation centers with a specialty in SCI rehabilitation in the Netherlands (N=261). Data were collected using a self-report questionnaire. DMSE was measured using the University of Washington Self-Efficacy Scale–Short Form (UW-SES-6). Correlation and linear regression analyses were used.Results:Levels of UW-SES-6 scores were largely independent of demographic and lesion characteristics. UW-SES-6 scores were bivariately moderately to strongly associated with mood (0.47), participation (0.39–0.51) and life satisfaction (0.46). In the regression analyses, UW-SES-6 scores still explained a significant amount of variance of participation (standardized β 0.31–0.33) and life satisfaction (standardized β 0.21) when controlling for demographic and lesion characteristics and mood, and explained an additional 3.2–8.1% of the variance of participation and life satisfaction.Conclusion:DMSE is a psychological resource associated with higher levels of participation and life satisfaction after SCI. The UW-SES-6 is a brief and easy to use measure of this psychological resource.


Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine | 2016

Low-Intensity Wheelchair Training in Inactive People with Long-Term Spinal Cord Injury: A Randomized Controlled Trial on Fitness, Wheelchair Skill Performance and Physical Activity Levels

Jan W. van der Scheer; Sonja de Groot; Marga Tepper; Willemijn X. Faber; DirkJan H. Veeger; Luc van der Woude; Hans Bussmann; David Gobets; Tom Janssen; Marcel W. M. Post; Hans J. Slootman; Linda J. Valent; Ferry Woldring

OBJECTIVE To investigate the effects of low-intensity wheelchair training on wheelchair-specific fitness, wheelchair skill performance and physical activity levels in inactive people with long-term spinal cord injury. DESIGN Randomized controlled trial. PARTICIPANTS Inactive manual wheelchair users with spinal cord injury for at least 10 years (n = 29), allocated to exercise (n = 14) or no exercise. METHODS The 16-week training consisted of wheelchair treadmill-propulsion at 30-40% heart rate reserve or equi-valent in terms of rate of perceived exertion, twice a week, for 30 min per session. Wheelchair-specific fitness was determined as the highest 5-s power output over 15-m overground wheelchair sprinting (P5-15m), isometric push-force, submaximal fitness and peak aerobic work capacity. Skill was determined as performance time, ability and strain scores over a wheelchair circuit. Activity was determined using a questionnaire and an odometer. RESULTS Significant training effects appeared only in P5-15m (exercise vs control: mean +2.0 W vs -0.7 W, p = 0.017, ru=0.65). CONCLUSION The low-intensity wheelchair training appeared insufficient for substantial effects in the sample of inactive people with long-term spinal cord injury, presumably in part owing to a too-low exercise frequency. Effective yet feasible and sustainable training, as well as other physical activity programmes remain to be developed for inactive people with long-term spinal cord injury.


Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine | 2014

WHEEL-I: DEvELOpMENT OF A WHEELCHAIR pROpULsION LAbORATORY FOR REHAbILITATION

Sonja de Groot; Riemer J. K. Vegter; Coen Vuijk; Frank J. H. van Dijk; Corien Plaggenmarsch; Maurits Sloots; Janneke M. Stolwijk-Swuste; Ferry Woldring; Marga Tepper; Lucas H. V. van der Woude

OBJECTIVE To describe the enabling factors and barriers experienced in the Wheelchair Expert Evaluation Laboratory - implementation (WHEEL-i) project, in which scientific knowledge, tools and associated systematic analyses of hand-rim wheelchair propulsion technique, users wheelchair propulsion capacity, wheelchair-user interface, and wheelchair mechanics were implemented in 2 rehabilitation centres. DESIGN Implementation project. PATIENTS Spinal cord injury. METHODS In this implementation project standardized tests were performed: wheelchair skills tests, 2 questionnaires, and a steady-state exercise test on a treadmill in which propulsion technique (forces and torques) and physical strain (oxygen uptake, heart rate and mechanical efficiency) were measured. RESULTS Good interpretation of the test outcomes was the most important barrier. In order to discuss individual wheelchair performance results with patients and clinicians, reference data were developed, smallest detectable differences were calculated and software was developed to simultaneously show video recordings and force and torque signals. CONCLUSION Based on pilot results, the greatest barrier to systematic monitoring of the individual wheelchair fitting and learning process in rehabilitation with, among others, instrumented measurement wheels, was interpretation of outcomes. For proper interpretation of individual outcomes, the availability of reference data, smallest detectable differences and visualization of outcomes is of utmost importance.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2015

Reduced voluntary drive during sustained but not during brief maximal voluntary contractions in the first dorsal interosseous weakened by spinal cord injury

Roeland F. Prak; Marwah Doestzada; Christine K. Thomas; Marga Tepper; Inge Zijdewind

In able-bodied (AB) individuals, voluntary muscle activation progressively declines during sustained contractions. However, few data are available on voluntary muscle activation during sustained contractions in muscles weakened by spinal cord injury (SCI), where greater force declines may limit task performance. SCI-related impairment of muscle activation complicates interpretation of the interpolated twitch technique commonly used to assess muscle activation. We attempted to estimate and correct for the SCI-related-superimposed twitch. Seventeen participants, both AB and with SCI (American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Scale C/D) produced brief and sustained (2-min) maximal voluntary contractions (MVCs) with the first dorsal interosseous. Force and electromyography were recorded together with superimposed (doublet) twitches. MVCs of participants with SCI were weaker than those of AB participants (20.3 N, SD 7.1 vs. 37.9 N, SD 9.5; P < 0.001); MVC-superimposed twitches were larger in participants with SCI (SCI median 10.1%, range 2.0-63.2%; AB median 4.7%, range 0.0-18.4% rest twitch; P = 0.007). No difference was found after correction for the SCI-related-superimposed twitch (median 6.7%, 0.0-17.5% rest twitch, P = 0.402). Thus during brief contractions, the maximal corticofugal output that participants with SCI could exert was similar to that of AB participants. During the sustained contraction, force decline (SCI, 58.0%, SD 15.1; AB, 57.2% SD 13.3) was similar (P = 0.887) because participants with SCI developed less peripheral (P = 0.048) but more central fatigue than AB participants. The largest change occurred at the start of the sustained contraction when the (corrected) superimposed twitches increased more in participants with SCI (SCI, 16.3% rest twitch, SD 20.8; AB, 2.7%, SD 4.7; P = 0.01). The greater reduction in muscle activation after SCI may relate to a reduced capacity to overcome fast fatigue-related excitability changes at the spinal level.


NeuroRehabilitation | 2017

Neurological and functional recovery in tuberculosis patients with spinal cord injury in The Netherlands

Eva M. N. Wouda; Ymkje Stienstra; Tjip S. van der Werf; Huib Kerstjens; Wiel C. M. de Lange; Maarten H. Coppes; Jos M. A. Kuijlen; Marga Tepper; Onno W. Akkerman

BACKGROUND Spinal tuberculosis (TB) accounts for approximately 1% to 3% of all TB cases and it can cause a wide range of neurological symptoms, from none to a complete spinal cord injury (SCI), resulting in complete paraplegia or tetraplegia. OBJECTIVES To describe the functional and neurological outcome of SCI caused by TB. METHODS Retrospective data on the admission period was combined with prospectively collected data on long-term follow-up. Primary outcome was neurological outcome in terms of motor function. Secondary outcome measures were functional outcome in terms of level of independence and community participation. Results were compared to the outcome in patients with SCI due to trauma. RESULTS Six TB patients with complete motor SCI (American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Scale (AIS) A or B) were compared to eighteen patients with traumatic SCI. Most TB patients regained almost full neurological function (median motor score improved from 50 to 100), and reached high levels of independence, whereas trauma patients did not improve neurologically (median motor score remained 50) and reached a plateau in level of independence. CONCLUSIONS SCI due to tuberculosis in the Netherlands shows remarkable improvement in both neurological and functional outcome, especially compared with traumatic SCI.

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Sonja de Groot

University Medical Center Groningen

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Lucas H. V. van der Woude

University Medical Center Groningen

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Sjoerd de Vries

Saxion University of Applied Sciences

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Bert Otten

University Medical Center Groningen

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Egbert Otten

University Medical Center Groningen

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