We are the combination of four hospitals: the General Hospital, the Children’s Hospital, the Women’s Hospital and the Traumatology, Rehabilitation and Burns Hospital. We are part of the Vall d’Hebron Barcelona Hospital Campus: a world-leading health park where healthcare plays a crucial role.
Patients are the centre and the core of our system. We are professionals committed to quality care and our organizational structure breaks down the traditional boundaries between departments and professional groups, with an exclusive model of knowledge areas.
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The commitment of Vall d'Hebron University Hospital to innovation allows us to be at the forefront of medicine, providing first class care adapted to the changing needs of each patient.
Cerebral palsy is a group of disorders affecting movement, posture and muscle tightness, caused by damage to the developing brain (in children up to approximately three years old). The severity of the symptoms varies widely: some patients can walk and lead independent lives, while others are more severely disabled. There may also be associated intellectual disabilities, problems with vision or hearing, problems when eating, seizures, etc.
These can be categorised according to the moment when the brain damage occurs: prenatal, perinatal and postnatal. Currently, the most frequent causes are: extremely premature birth, hypoxia of the brain during birth, and paediatric stroke.
In babies, we see slower psychomotor development, with difficulties in movements or activities. We usually see spasticity, which could be defined as increased tightness in a certain group of muscles. There are major musculoskeletal abnormalities, including spinal deformity, hip dislocation and ankle equinus.
Fundamentally clinical diagnosis, depending on the patient's history. But confirmation is needed by additional imaging tests such as cranial ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging. However, these can be normal.
Unfortunately, there is no cure for cerebral palsy. However, we can deal with the pathology in different ways, both in prevention and in treatment:
No specific prevention is possible.
Apart from the physiotherapy and/or occupational therapy which can be offered or recommended to these patients, physical exercise can always be suggested, depending on the abilities of each person. We also recommend stretching certain muscle groups and trying to correct posture.
Arthrosis is a degenerative process characterised by lesions of the cartilage in joints. A joint is the area where a bone connects with another bone, allowing movement. Cartilage is a tissue that covers the joints, acts as a shock absorber for impacts, and also allows the joints to move without friction. Normally, this condition appears in the spinal column, neck, hip, knees, and hands.
The most common manifestation is pain that improves with rest, stiffness when initiating movement, deformities, and difficulty moving the affected joints. There can be a certain degree of inflammation, which will cause swelling due to the excessive accumulation of liquid in the joint.
However, it must be differentiated from arthritis, which is a rheumatic inflammatory disease rooted in joint inflammation that can cause pain which does not improve with rest. Arthrosis is often also called osteoarthritis, which can create some confusion.
This disease is very prevalent and has a high social and health impact. The EPISER2016 study, by the Spanish Society of Rheumatology, showed that the prevalence in the population over 40 years of age is 29%.
Age is the main risk factor. It is more frequent in women. A deterioration of the cartilage is clearly associated with obesity and a lack of regular physical exercise. A misaligned joint or poor posture can also be predisposing factors. Sometimes the cause is a traumatic injury or previous disorder of the affected joint. It has a genetic component (especially arthrosis of the hands).
A diagnosis is obtained by looking at the symptoms, physical examination, and the imaging tests.
Treatment for this disease is aimed at improving symptoms and quality of life for patients while slowing down its clinical evolution. A treatment plan must be individually prepared for each patient and type of joint.
Non-pharmaceutical treatment is essential. We recommend:
Pharmacological treatment normally consists of conventional pain relievers such as paracetamol, which is the analgesic treatment of choice. There are slow-acting treatments, such as chondroitin sulphate (taken orally) or hyaluronic acid (given as an injection), which can improve pain, especially in arthrosis of the knees. Surgery (joint replacement) is reserved for cases in which the joint is destroyed and other measures have failed.
Acute spinal cord injuries, both in adults and children, are a complex and significant health problem that negatively affects the patient in terms of morbidity and mortality, but that also has an impact on their personal environment.
The main symptoms are those derived from motor paralysis and lack of feeling below the area of the injury, and also and above all, effects on the autonomic nervous system which produce: changes to the cardiovascular and respiratory systems, to the urinary tract including changes to the capacity to store and evacuate urine, to the digestive system causing severe constipation, incontinence and faecal impaction, as well as changes to sexual function.
Treatment is integrated rehabilitation aimed at early intervention once the acute spinal cord injury has occurred in order to prevent complications and achieve the greatest functional independence possible in all physical, emotional and social aspects. Re-establish self-esteem by maximising the remaining abilities; encouraging the best social reintegration possible (active, independent and satisfying); and informing and advising the family to help them understand and manage the disability.
When it comes to young people, prevention of complex spinal cord injuries is focused on avoiding risky activities: reckless driving or driving under the influence of alcohol and drugs, diving into shallow water and dangerous sports such as climbing, MTB or skiing. In the case of adults, especially the elderly, it centres on eliminating risks to prevent falling such as carpets or heights, by using walking sticks and controlling medication to avoid orthostatic hypertension which can cause falls.
Parkinson's disease is a dysfunction of the basal ganglia caused by degeneration of the cells that produce dopamine in the substantia nigra.
It is a progressive neurodegenerative disease of the central nervous system that affects the parts of the brain involved in controlling and coordinating movement, muscle tone and posture.
The prevalence of Parkinson’s in Catalonia is 229 in every 100,000 people.
This is focused on empowering patients and their carers to achieve behavioural changes within their own control and to motivate them to continue treatment long term. It centres on reducing medication and gaining quality of movement. The main goal is functional independence for the individual and general physical condition from the onset of the disease. It is all geared towards minimising secondary complications and the risk of falls.
There are a growing number of studies emphasising that aerobic activity may have a neuro-protective effect. Likewise, during treatment, preventing inactivity, falling and fear of getting around or falling is stressed.
It is a cancer that develops in muscle and soft tissue. It can therefore be found in any part of the body, although most commonly in the head and neck, including the eye sockets. Despite being a rare cancer, as are all tumours in children, it is the most common cancer of the soft tissue found in childhood. This disease is more common in boys than in girls.
Although mainly found in the head and neck, it may also occur in the genitourinary system such as the bladder and prostate in boys and the vagina or uterus in girls. It may also appear in other places such as the limbs (arms and legs) and, less commonly, in the abdomen and around the genitals and anus. Symptoms vary depending on the location of the tumour.
More than half of all soft tissue sarcoma found in children are rhabdomyosarcoma. Most children are diagnosed under nine years old, but this type of cancer can appear at any age.
Different symptoms are produced depending on where tumours are located.
Malignant neoplasms are rare, but they are one of the most important causes of morbidity and mortality in this age group. Around 1,000 patients under 14 years of age are diagnosed with cancer every year in Spain. Rhabdomyosarcoma represents 6% of cancers in children meaning there are 60 new cases every year in Spain.
The child’s doctor will perform a very careful examination and to reach a diagnosis the doctor will request several tests, which may include:
These tests will help to determine the size and location of the tumour and whether it has spread to any other part of the body.
Rhabdomyosarcoma is a highly malignant type of tumour and must therefore be treated with a combination of therapies including surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy.
Each of these treatments is administered depending on the condition of the tumour and the age of the child.
There are currently no known measures to help prevent this type of tumour.
The concept of resistant osteoarticular infections encompasses all procedures on patients with infections that have not responded to previous medical and surgical treatment.
These procedures may be changing prostheses or treatment for chronic osteomyelitis or septic pseudoarthrosis among others.
The different types of resistant osteoarticular infections treated are:
Osteomyelitis/osteitis of haematogenous origin and which are resistant to medical and surgical treatment:
Chronic osteomyelitis or septic pseudoarthrosis derived from trauma or surgical interventions. Those resulting from open fractures, typically in the tibia, are often accompanied by loss of bone or the cutaneous covering. Exact incidence rates are not known, but the more exposed the bone has been, the higher the chances of chronic infection.
Periprosthetic infections. This type of infection occurs in 1-3% of primary arthroplasty procedures. In some cases, the only obvious symptom may be pain. The presence of a fistula or the isolation of a pathogen microorganism in different samples is used to confirm diagnosis. The most common treatment is to change the prosthesis in two separate procedures.
Severe treatment-resistant diseases of the soft tissue (necrotizing fasciitis, gangrene). These are extremely unusual lesions and when do they appear they are often fatal. Excessive localized pain may be the only initial symptom, making it very difficult to diagnose at this stage. When diagnosed, aggressive treatment with antibiotics and surgical debridement can have an impact on survival and the need for amputation.
Patient-related factors (control of additional diseases or disorders) are very important in the prevention of osteoarticular infection, as are those related to surgery (antibiotic prophylaxis), the presence of implants, and tissue condition (bone and cutaneous covering) amongst others.
This type of infection requires a multidisciplinary team as treatment is very complex.
These syndromes are a group of diseases characterised by insufficient blood cell production (anaemia, neutropenia and thrombocytopenia), constitutional malformations and the risk of cancer.
They are usually diagnosed in childhood but there some cases diagnosed in adults. Specifically, these syndromes are: Fanconi anaemia, dyskeratosis congenita or selectively severe congenital neutropenia, Diamond-Blackfan anaemia, Diamond-Shwachman syndrome, and amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia.
Malformations caused by inherited bone marrow failure syndromes affect the skin, bones, heart and digestive system as well as the urinary system, the central nervous system, and others. They may also affect the area around the bone marrow.
Besides this, they also increase the predisposition to cancers such as acute myeloid leukaemia, myelodysplastic syndrome and squamous carcinoma of the head, neck and reproductive organs.
These syndromes have important biological pathways in common related to cell growth and division such as the activation of the p53 gene that is responsible for halting the cell cycle, cell ageing and cell death. In addition, mutations have been identified in more than 80 genes.
Although this is treated in childhood, once the patient reaches adulthood monitoring is very important. Early diagnosis of these syndromes is essential to ensure the patient receives appropriate treatment. The aim is to minimise toxicity at the same time as allowing genetic counselling, and implementing strategies for cancer prevention and monitoring. This treatment should focus on treating the bone marrow failure, but also any constitutional malformations and extra-haematological manifestations, in addition to cancer treatment.
A multidisciplinary team of specialists with extensive experience of these diseases is necessary to ensure optimum patient care.
The first symptoms are related to a lack of blood cell production:
There are also signs related to malformations such as:
Estimated incidence rates of the different syndromes are:
The usual tests to detect inherited bone marrow failure are:
The following methods are used to treat these pathologies:
To prevent these diseases it is important to avoid smoking, alcohol, sun exposure, and to have a balanced diet. In addition, a cancer prevention programme should be followed with regular visits to the Cancer Prevention Unit and the Ear, Nose and Throat, Maxillofacial and Gynaecology departments.
Osteoarthritis is a condition that causes the cartilage developed by the bones to protect them from the wear caused by using the knee to break down. Once this deterioration has started, it develops progressively. At advanced stages of the condition, this breakdown causes pain and prevents patients from walking or standing normally. There are currently no medications to halt the breakdown at this stage.
When the pain cannot be managed with the usual painkillers, total knee replacement surgery is required, also known as arthroplasty.
The aims of knee replacement surgery are to:
During surgery, joint surfaces that are missing cartilage are replaced by an artificial implant made of chrome, cobalt or titanium.Once the affected part has been removed, the metal implant is put into place and fixed to the bone using cement.
At Valld’Hebron Hospital, we perform up to 500 knee replacement operations a year.
Early treatment by expert neurologists and admission to specialised units significantly reduces mortality and long-term dependence in people who suffer from acute stroke. It is essential, then, that if you suspect that you or someone else is having a stroke, you call 112 and follow their instructions to get treatment at the appropriate hospital.
It is also important to state as accurately as possible the time of onset of symptoms. If the patient is unable to give this information or has woken up with signs of a possible stroke, the start time will be considered the last hour he was awake and asymptomatic.
In the case of ischemic strokes, the purpose of treatment is to undo or remove, in the shortest possible time, the clot that is cutting off the natural blood circulation in the brain. There are two ways to do this:
In haemorrhagic strokes, the treatment aims to stop the bleeding that has been caused by the rupture of a vessel and prevent the increase in size of the haemorrhage. Therefore, regular monitoring of the patient is performed to gauge the level of consciousness and any neurological deficits. This is maintained for at least the first 72 hours after suffering a stroke. We also perform intensive monitoring of blood pressure, blood sugar levels and temperature to foresee possible complications.
Brain bleeding can cause inflammation of the surrounding brain tissue (known as oedema). If this happens, it is necessary to administer medication intravenously to reduce it. In people who are being treated with oral anticoagulants or who have alterations in haemostasis (a process that the body performs to slow down bleeding), it should be corrected as soon as possible.
In more severe cases, specialists may recommend surgery to drain the bleeding. The decision on surgical treatment is made based on factors such as the location and size of the haemorrhage, age, and the patient’s medical history. This is a difficult decision as it is not always possible to access it without causing damage to other areas of the brain.
The purpose of neurorehabilitation is to regain lost or diminished neurological functions as a result of a stroke. However, there are phases of recovery:
The interdisciplinary team involved throughout the different stages works so that the patient has the maximum independence and adaptation to their environment. To meet these goals, it is advisable to start recovery as soon as possible and, from the initial stages, foster the participation of patient and caregivers.
It should be mentioned that there is “Spontaneous recovery”: this is when the brain has the ability to recover from the damage it has suffered on its own. This recovery, however, may not be enough to reduce the sequelae. That is why it is advisable to always follow the instructions of specialists.
An interdisciplinary team deals with the recovery of a patient who has suffered a stroke. Each of the professionals acts according to the evolution of the condition and the needs that arise at any given time:
Other professionals such as doctors, nurses and orthopaedic technicians are also involved in the rehabilitation process.
In this disease, which has no symptoms, the most important thing is the prevention of its most dreaded complication, fractures. Both treatment and prevention must be supervised by a primary care doctor or specialist.
To prevent osteoporosis and the risk of fracture, a diet rich in calcium, magnesium, and vitamin D, found in legumes, avocados, and nuts, is recommended.
If you don't get enough calcium in your diet, taking supplements may be necessary. The National Osteoporosis Foundation recommends a daily calcium intake of 1000 mg for most adults and 1200 mg for women over 50 and men over 70.
This vitamin is important to help the body absorb calcium from the foods we eat. The recommended daily dose is between 400 and 800 international units (IUs) for adults under 50, and 800 to 1000 IUs for those over 50. These are the current guidelines from the National Osteoporosis Foundation. You may need a different dose, depending on the levels of vitamin D in your blood, sometimes up to 50,000 units per week for 12 weeks.
There are also medications containing antiresorptive or bone-forming agents, such as bisphosphonates, parathyroid hormone (PTH), monoclonal antibodies, and others, which can be prescribed by a doctor based on a patient's comorbidities (what other disorders or diseases they have) and preferences.
Doing a moderate physical activity with some impact is recommended, such as jumping, walking, or dancing, along with other activities like yoga and tai chi, which have additional benefits when it comes to preventing falls and fractures.
Exercise slows muscular atrophy, improves joint mobility, directly promotes bone formation, and improves neuromuscular coordination.
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