B. Ivanyi et al., Late onset polio sequelae: Disabilities and handicaps in a population-based cohort of the 1956 poliomyelitis outbreak in The Netherlands, ARCH PHYS M, 80(6), 1999, pp. 687-690
Objective: To investigate the prevalence of new neuromuscular symptoms, dis
abilities, and handicaps in a group of polio survivors.
Design: A self-constructed health questionnaire about neuromuscular complai
nts and disability and handicap levels during the stable period after recov
ery from polio and at present.
Subjects: Three hundred fifty subjects, derived from the 1,784 polio cases
registered during the 1956 polio outbreak in The Netherlands.
Results: Respondents totaled 260 (74%), 27 of whom denied or did not recall
having had paralytic poliomyelitis. The remaining 233 subjects comprised t
he study group (mean age, 44yrs; range, 39 to 77; SD = 6.3). Frequency of a
ll neuromuscular complaints at present time was significantly higher than t
hat during the stable period after polio (range in p of .001 to .004). Fift
y-eight percent of cases reported an increase in muscle weakness in compari
son with muscle condition during the stable period. Fifty-six percent repor
ted an increase in disabilities, mainly a restriction in gait functions. Fi
fty-three percent reported increased handicaps with regard to occupation an
d social integration, and there was an increased need for adaptive measures
and devices.
Conclusion: Nearly 60% of a sample of Dutch survivors of the 1956 polio out
break experience late onset polio sequelae, resulting in increased severity
of disabilities and handicaps. (C) 1999 by the American Congress of Rehabi
litation Medicine and the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabil
itation.