April 18, 2017; 88 (16 Supplement) April 25, 2017
Ambulation Assistive Device Training Prevents Falls, Increases Device Satisfaction and May Decrease Sitting and Increase Walking in MS: A Randomized-Controlled Pilot Study (S24.004)
Andrea Hildebrand, Douglas Martini, Brett Fling, Michelle Cameron
First published April 17, 2017,
Andrea Hildebrand
1Neurology, VA Portland Health Care System Portland OR United States
Douglas Martini
2Neurology, Oregon Health & Science University Portland OR United States
Brett Fling
3Health & Exercise Science, Colorado State University Fort Collins CO United States
Michelle Cameron
1Neurology, VA Portland Health Care System Portland OR United States
2Neurology, Oregon Health & Science University Portland OR United States
Ambulation Assistive Device Training Prevents Falls, Increases Device Satisfaction and May Decrease Sitting and Increase Walking in MS: A Randomized-Controlled Pilot Study (S24.004)
Andrea Hildebrand, Douglas Martini, Brett Fling, Michelle Cameron
Neurology Apr 2017, 88 (16 Supplement) S24.004;
Citation Manager Formats
Make Comment
See Comments
Disputes & Debates: Rapid online correspondence
No comments have been published for this article.
NOTE: All authors' disclosures must be entered and current in our database before comments can be posted. Enter and update disclosures at http://submit.neurology.org. Exception: replies to comments concerning an article you originally authored do not require updated disclosures.
- Stay timely. Submit only on articles published within the last 8 weeks.
- Do not be redundant. Read any comments already posted on the article prior to submission.
- 200 words maximum.
- 5 references maximum. Reference 1 must be the article on which you are commenting.
- 5 authors maximum. Exception: replies can include all original authors of the article.
- Submitted comments are subject to editing and editor review prior to posting.
You May Also be Interested in
Advertisement
Related Articles
- No related articles found.