Table of Contents
- Overview
- Treatment
- Prevention
- Images
Muscle stiffness
Home Care
Exercise, including muscle stretching, can help make your symptoms less severe. Home-based physical therapy is also helpful
Call your health care provider if
Contact your health care provider if:
- The spasticity worsens
- Contracture deformities appear to be developing
What to expect at your health care provider's office
Your doctor will perform a physical exam and ask questions about your symptoms, including:
- When was it first noticed?
- How long has it lasted?
- Is it always present?
- How severe is it?
- What muscles are affected?
- What makes it better?
- What makes it worse?
- What other symptoms are also present?
Your doctor may refer you to a physical therapist. Physical therapy consists of variety of exercises, including muscle stretching and strengthening exercises. Physical therapy exercises can be taught to parents who may then help their child perform them at home.
Medicines for spasticity include baclofen, tizanidine, cyclobenzaprine, and benzodiazepines. In rare cases, a pump may be inserted into the spinal fluid to directly deliver medicine to the nervous system.
Botox injections may help relieve spasticity symptoms in some patients.
Sometimes, a person may need surgery to release the tendon or to cut the the nerve-muscle pathway.
Images
Previous Section
Review Date: 03/26/2009
Reviewed By: David C. Dugdale, III, MD, Professor of Medicine, Division of
General Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Washington
School of Medicine; and Daniel B. Hoch, PhD, MD, Assistant
Professor of Neurology, Harvard Medical School, Department of
Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital. Also reviewed by David
Zieve, MD, MHA, Medical Director, A.D.A.M., Inc.
A.D.A.M., Inc. is accredited by URAC, also known as the American Accreditation HealthCare Commission (www.urac.org)
