Functional Ambulation in Patients with Myelomeningocele

Abstract
Se with lesions of the sacral level walked. In those with lesions at lumbar levels (twenty-one lower and nineteen upper) fourteen were community ambulators and five household ambulators. The other twenty-one were either wheel-chair (nineteen) or non-functional ambulators (two) and the level of paraplegia did not seem to matter nor did the extent of surgery. Some very young non-functional ambulators rose in functional level, but in most instances the trend was to deteriorate. The factors important in achieving good walking status in myelomeningocele include level of paraplegia, the additional anomalies of brain and kidney, the intelligence, and the home environment. In a group of fifty-six patients none of those with lesions of the thoracic level walked and all of those with lesions of the sacral level walked. In those with lesions at lumbar levels (twenty-one lower and nineteen upper) fourteen were community ambulators and five household ambulators. The other twenty-one were either wheel-chair (nineteen) or non-functional ambulators (two) and the level of paraplegia did not seem to matter nor did the extent of surgery. Some very young non-functional ambulators rose in functional level, but in most instances the trend was to deteriorate. Copyright © 1973 by The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Incorporated...