| Literature DB >> 27703443 |
Andoret van Wyk1, Carina A Eksteen1, Piet J Becker2, Barbara M Heinze3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Visual impairment, specifically eye movement disorders and vestibular dysfunction may have a negative influence on the functional recovery in post-stroke patients. This type of sensory dysfunction may further be associated with poor functional outcome in patients' post-stroke.Entities:
Keywords: eye movement disorders; physiotherapy; prevalence; rehabilitation; stroke; vestibular dysfunction; visual impairment
Year: 2016 PMID: 27703443 PMCID: PMC5028913 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2016.00140
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
The battery of valid and standardized outcome measures that will be completed by a qualified audiologist and physiotherapist.
| Outcome measure used by the physiotherapist | Objective (phase 1) | Objective (phase 2) | Validity and reliability of outcome measure |
|---|---|---|---|
| Video nystagmography (VNG) | To determine the prevalence of visual impairments and central vestibular dysfunction in patients who sustained a stroke measured by the assessment of (a) nystagmus, (b) saccadic eye movements, and (c) smooth pursuit eye movements | To determine the effect of the combination of VRT and VSE integrated with task-specific activities received by patients in Group 1 compared with patients in Group 2 who received task-specific activities alone on their (a) visual impairments, (b) central vestibular dysfunction, (c) nystagmus, (d) saccadic eye movements, and (e) smooth pursuit eye movements after the intervention period of 2 weeks | Video nystagmography (VNG) records eye movements using digital video image technology to quantify (a) nystagmus, (b) saccadic eye movements, and (c) smooth pursuit eye movements ( |
| EyeSeeCam vHIT | To determine the prevalence of visual impairments and central vestibular dysfunction in patients who sustained a stroke measured by the assessment of the vestibulo-ocular reflex | To determine the effect of the combination of VRT and VSE integrated with task-specific activities received by patients in Group 1 compared with patients in Group 2 who received task-specific activities alone on their (a) visual impairments, (b) central vestibular dysfunction, and (c) vestibulo-ocular reflex after the intervention period of 2 weeks | Measurements of the HIT with the EyeSeeCam vHIT quantify the VOR-deficit and detect the presence of corrective saccades ( |
| Vestibular-evoked myogenic potential (VEMP), cervical vestibular-evoked myogenic potential (cVEMP), and ocular vestibular-evoked myogenic potential (oVEMP) | To determine the prevalence of visual impairments and central vestibular dysfunction in patients who sustained a stroke measured by the assessment of the saccular (cVEMP), utricular (oVEMP), and vestibular nerve function | To determine the effect of the combination of VRT and VSE integrated with task-specific activities received by patients in Group 1 compared with patients in Group 2 who received task-specific activities alone on their (a) visual impairments, (b) central vestibular dysfunction, and (c) saccular, utricular, and vestibular nerve function after the intervention period of 2 weeks | Intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) values ranged between 0.78 and 0.96 and CVME values ranged from 4 to 36% for P1 and N1 latency, threshold, and interpeak amplitude ( |
| LogMar chart – static visual acuity | To determine the prevalence of visual impairments and central vestibular dysfunction in patients who sustained a stroke measured by the assessment of visual acuity (static) | To determine the effect of the combination of VRT and VSE integrated with task-specific activities received by patients in Group 1 compared with patients in Group 2 who received task-specific activities alone on their (a) visual impairments, (b) central vestibular dysfunction, and (c) visual acuity after the intervention period of 2 weeks | The LogMar chart that follows the principle of logarithmic size progression during the assessment of visual acuity is “considered to be the gold standard for the assessment of distant vision” ( |
| LogMar chart – dynamic visual acuity | To determine the prevalence of visual impairments and central vestibular dysfunction in patients who sustained a stroke measured by the assessment of the vestibulo-ocular reflex | To determine the effect of the combination of VRT and VSE integrated with task-specific activities received by patients in Group 1 compared with patients in Group 2 who received task-specific activities alone on their (a) visual impairments, (b) central vestibular dysfunction, and (c) vestibulo-ocular reflex after the intervention period of 2 weeks | Provides an objective, behavioral assessment of vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) function in response to rotational head movement stimuli. The Dynamic Visual Acuity test (DVA) assesses visual acuity during head movement relative to baseline static visual acuity assessed by the LogMar chart. Unilateral vestibular hypofunction (UVH) ( |
| Mini-Mental State Examination | To determine the association between the presence of visual impairments and central vestibular dysfunction on the patients’ cognitive function. Patients must score at least 7/30 on this scale to be included into the study | To determine the effect of the combination of VRT and VSE integrated with task-specific activities received by patients in Group 1 compared with patients in Group 2 who received task-specific activities alone on their (a) visual impairments, (b) central vestibular dysfunction, and (c) cognitive function after the intervention period of 2 weeks | The MMSE has significant correlates with the Barthel Index ( |
| Vula eye health mobile application | To determine the prevalence of visual impairments and central vestibular dysfunction in patients who sustained a stroke measured by the assessment of visual acuity and screening of the patients’ eye health condition | To determine the effect of the combination of VRT and VSE integrated with task-specific activities received by patients in Group 1 compared with patients in Group 2 who received task-specific activities alone on their (a) visual impairments, (b) central vestibular dysfunction, (c) visual acuity, and (d) eye health condition after the intervention period of 2 weeks | The researcher did not find any publication with regard to the mobile application’s validity and reliability in the stroke population but decided to include this measure because visual acuity and eye health condition are very important visual function to determine because intervention in phase 2 of the study need to take a patient’s visual acuity and eye health condition into consideration when implementing the patient’s intervention |
| If a specific eye condition or eye disease is suspected, the patient will be referred to an ophthalmologist for ophthalmologic assessment and management | |||
| King-Devick Test © ( | To determine the association between the presence of visual impairments and central vestibular dysfunction on the patients’ residual oculomotor visual performance | To determine the effect of the combination of VRT and VSE integrated with task-specific activities received by patients in Group 1 compared with patients in Group 2 who received task-specific activities alone on their (a) visual impairments, (b) central vestibular dysfunction, and (c) residual oculomotor visual performance after the intervention period of 2 weeks | The King–Devick (K–D) test is a <2-min bedside test that requires saccadic eye movements for rapid visual performance measurement. Although the test is quick to perform, the researcher did not find any publication with regard to the test’s reliability in the stroke population. Moster et al. ( |
| Star cancelation test ( | To determine the association between the presence of visual impairments and central vestibular dysfunction on the patients’ visual–perceptual function | To determine the effect of the combination of VRT and VSE integrated with task-specific activities received by patients in Group 1 compared with patients in Group 2 who received task-specific activities alone on their (a) visual impairments, (b) central vestibular dysfunction, and (c) visual–perceptual function after the intervention period of 2 weeks | Plummer et al. noted that Marsh and Kersel reported the correlation between the Line Bisection Test with the Star Cancellation Test (Pearson |
| Berg balance scale | To determine the association between the presence of visual impairments and central vestibular dysfunction on the patients’ functional balance (static) | To determine the effect of the combination of VRT and VSE integrated with task-specific activities received by patients in Group 1 compared with patients in Group 2 who received task-specific activities alone on their (a) visual impairments, (b) central vestibular dysfunction, and (c) functional balance after the intervention period of 2 weeks | The Berg Balance Scale (BBS) has an excellent test–retest reliability (ICC = 0.88) ( |
| Dynamic gait index (DGI) ( | To determine the association between the presence of visual impairments and central vestibular dysfunction on the patients’ gait (dynamic balance) | To determine the effect of the combination of VRT and VSE integrated with task-specific activities received by patients in Group 1 compared with patients in Group 2 who received task-specific activities alone on their (a) visual impairments, (b) central vestibular dysfunction, and (c) gait after the intervention period of 2 weeks | McConvey and Bennett ( |
| Barthel index (BI) ( | To determine the association between the presence of visual impairments and central vestibular dysfunction on the patients’ functional ability | To determine the effect of the combination of VRT and VSE integrated with task-specific activities received by patients in Group 1 compared with patients in Group 2 who received task-specific activities alone on their (a) visual impairments, (b) central vestibular dysfunction, and (c) functional ability after the intervention period of 2 weeks | The Barthel Index’s (BI) calculated inter-rater reliability using the intraclass correlation (ICC) = 0.94 and the internal consistency using Cronbach’s alpha ranges between 0.89 and 0.92. The BI also closely correlated with the Berg Balance Scale and the Fugl-Meyer motor assessment in patients with stroke (Pearson’s correlation coefficient |
| Hsueh et al. reported inter-rater reliability for individual items (kappa value range, 0.53–0.94) and total score (ICC = 0.94) of the BI in stroke patients ( | |||
| Hospital anxiety and depression scale | To determine the association between the presence of visual impairments and central vestibular dysfunction on the patients’ level of anxiety and depression | To determine the effect of the combination of VRT and VSE integrated with task-specific activities received by patients in Group 1 compared with patients in Group 2 who received task-specific activities alone on their (a) visual impairments, (b) central vestibular dysfunction, and (c) level of anxiety after the intervention period of 2 weeks | Correlation between the HADS and the BDI ranges from |
| Telephonic-administered international physical activity questionnaire (IPAQ) | To determine the association between the presence of visual impairments and central vestibular dysfunction on the patients’ participation in physical activity | To determine the effect of the combination of VRT and VSE integrated with task-specific activities received by patients in Group 1 compared with patients in Group 2 who received task-specific activities alone on their (a) visual and ocular impairments and (b) central vestibular dysfunction post-stroke’s participation in physical activity 20 weeks after rehabilitation has been terminated | Correlation between the telephonic-administered IPAQ compared with a face-to-face administered IPAQ was found to be 0.92 for the section on leisure-time, and 0.87 for the section on transport-related activities ( |
| Reliability data for the IPAQ short questionnaires ( |
Guide of the principles of saccadic eye movement training with visual scanning exercises integrated with task-specific activities and the principles of progression of these exercises (.
| Functional positions | Progression of task-specific activity | Visual scanning exercises integrated with task-specific activity | Progression of visual scanning exercises integrated with task-specific activity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Supine |
Bridging with feet on a balance mat (i.e., Airex balance mat). ↓ Bridging with feet on a balance ball. |
Manually and/or verbally facilitate head rotation toward impaired side. ↓ Perform bridging while doing saccadic eye movements by naming individual letters or numbers aloud on flash cards that are “flashed” by the physiotherapist from all directions. Example: Flash cards are shown on the impaired side by the treating physiotherapist. ↓ Flash cards are placed against the wall on the impaired side. ↓ Bridge while doing small saccadic eye movements by naming individual letters aloud on a HART-chart. Example: |
Bridging (lift buttocks up) while naming letter aloud on flash card. Example: ↓ Return to supine (drop buttocks) and immediately naming letter aloud on flash card. Example: Repeat activity with various flash cards with different letters/numbers and from different directions. ↓ Bridging (lift buttocks up) while naming letter aloud on the HART-chart. Example: ↓ Return to supine (drop buttocks) and immediately naming the next letter aloud on the HART-chart. Repeat activity on all lines of HART-chart. ↓ Bridging (lift buttocks up) while naming letter aloud on the HART-chart from top to bottom. Example: ↓ Return to supine (drop buttocks) and immediately naming the next letter aloud on the HART-chart. Example: Repeat activity on all lines of HART-chart. |
| Side lying to sitting | Side lying to sitting on an uneven surface (i.e., on a soft mat) | Move from supine to side lying and from side lying to sitting while fixating the eyes on a number or letter on a flash card. Example:
|
Incorporate smooth pursuit eye movements and visual fixation by tracking of an object:
Patient fixates eyes on an object that is moved by the treating physiotherapist toward the impaired/affected side while sitting up. Keep eyes fixated on moving object, head may turn while sitting up. Keep head still while continuing to fixate on an object that is moving toward the impaired/affected side while sitting up. |
| Sitting |
Sitting on a balance mat Sitting on a balance disk Sitting on a roller Sitting on an exercise ball |
↓ |
Progress to larger saccadic eye movements and visual search strategies. Start in the middle of the row and progress from (L) to (R). Increase the saccadic eye movements by progressing outwards toward the furthest letter/number on the (L) and (R). Repeat activity on all lines of HART-chart. ↓ Progress to larger saccadic eye movements and visual search strategies. Name the letter furthest on the (L), “jump” with eyes immediately to the letter furthest on the (R). Repeat the process by naming the second letter on the (L) and immediately the second letter on the (R). Repeat till the middle of the row inwards. Repeat activity on all lines of HART-chart. ↓ ↓
Start in the middle of the row and progress from top to bottom. Increase the saccadic eye movements by progressing outwards toward the furthest letter/number on the top and bottom. Repeat activity on all lines of HART-chart. ↓ Name the letter furthest on the top, “jump” with eyes immediately to the letter furthest on the bottom. Repeat the process by naming the second letter on the top and immediately the second letter on the bottom. Repeat till the middle of the row inwards. Repeat activity on all lines of HART-chart. Incorporate smooth pursuit eye movements and visual fixation by tracking of an object:
Patient fixates eyes on an object that is moved by the treating physiotherapist toward the impaired/affected side while sitting. Keep eyes fixated on moving object, head may turn while sitting up. Keep head still while continuing to fixate on an object that is moving toward the impaired/affected side while sitting up. |
| Sit to stand |
With support in front of a table Without support of a table Sit to stand on an even surface Sit to stand on an uneven surface, i.e., balance mat | Move from sit to stand while fixating the eyes on a number or letter on a flash card. Example: |
Move from sit to stand while naming letter aloud on a flash card. Example: ↓ Move from standing to sitting while naming letter aloud on a flash card. Example: Repeat activity with various flash cards with different letters. ↓ Move from sit to stand while naming letter aloud on a HART-chart. Example: ↓ Move from standing to sitting while naming letter aloud on a HART-chart. Example: Repeat activity on all lines of HART-chart. ↓ Move from sit to stand while naming letter aloud on a HART-chart. Example: ↓ Move from standing to sitting while naming letter aloud on a HART-chart. Example: Repeat activity on all lines of HART-chart. |
| Standing |
With support in front of a table Without support of a table With an assistive device – walking frame; crutch; quadpod; tripod, walking stick Without an assistive device Standing near a wall for support Stand in the middle of a room without support Standing on a proprioception mat Standing on balance disk or Bosu ball Standing on a mini – trampoline | Performing saccadic eye movements with visual scanning exercises while in standing.
↓ |
Progress to larger saccadic eye movements and visual search strategies in standing. Start in the middle of the row and progress from (L) to (R). Increase the saccadic eye movements by progressing outwards toward the furthest letter/number on the (L) and (R). Repeat activity on all lines of HART-chart. ↓ Progress to larger saccadic eye movements and visual search strategies instanding. Name the letter furthest on the (L), “jump” with eyes immediately to the letter furthest on the (R). Repeat the process by naming the second letter on the (L) and immediately the second letter on the (R). Repeat till the middle of the row inwards. Repeat activity on all lines of HART-chart. ↓ ↓
Start in the middle of the row and progress from top to bottom. Increase the saccadic eye movements by progressing outwards toward the furthest letter/number on the top and bottom. Repeat activity on all lines of HART-chart. ↓ Name the letter furthest on the top, “jump” with eyes immediately to the letter furthest on the bottom. Repeat the process by naming the second letter on the top and immediately the second letter on the bottom. Repeat till the middle of the row inwards. Repeat activity on all lines of HART-chart. Incorporate smooth pursuit eye movements and visual fixation by tracking of an object:
Patient fixates eyes on an object that is moved by the treating physiotherapist toward the impaired/affected side while sitting. Keep eyes fixated on moving object, head may turn while sitting up. Keep head still while continuing to fixate on an object that is moving toward the impaired/affected side while sitting up. |
| Half-standing |
With support in front of a table Without support of a table With an assistive device – walking frame; crutch; quadpod; tripod, walking stick Without an assistive device Standing near a wall for support Stand in the middle of a room without support One leg on the floor and one leg on a balance mat/Bosu ball One leg on the balance mat and one leg on a step One leg on the balance mat and one leg on a balance ball |
Place one leg on a step while performing saccadic eye movements with visual scanning exercises. ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ |
Alternate legs on the step while performing visual scanning exercises. One leg on the floor and one leg on a step.
Place one leg on the step while naming letter aloud on HART-chart. Alternate legs by placing the other leg and immediately naming aloud the next letter on the HART-chart. Incorporate flash card between naming of letters on HART-chart. Example: ↓ ↓ ↓ Repeat activity on all lines of HART-chart. |
| Gait |
With an assistive device – walking frame; crutch; quadpod; tripod, walking stick Without an assistive device While holding a tray Walking with one foot on an AIREX balance beam and the other foot on the floor (even surface) Walking in a figure of eight |
Walking on an even/uneven surface while fixating the eyes on a number or letter on a flash card. Example: Walking on an even/uneven surface while performing saccadic eye movements with visual scanning exercises. ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ |
Keep eyes fixated on a flash card while turning. Example: Incorporate flash card between naming of letters on HART-chart. Example: ↓ ↓ ↓ Repeat activity on all lines of HART-chart. Walking while holding a tray. Placing flash cards on the tray while walking, reading the numbers on the flash cards aloud. Example: |
An example of the flow of a therapy session based on the task-specific approach (.
| Steps followed | Task-specific activities |
|---|---|
| Step 1 | Identify the impairments and lacking components during the execution of activities |
| Determine the appropriate steps that need to be facilitated to be able to complete the original task | |
| Step 2 | Choose a number of skills during each treatment that are specific to the deficits and missing components identified in Step 1 and that share similar performance components with the functional tasks trained in the same session |
| Step 3 | Practice the skills and reinforce the practice of the missing components throughout the treatment session |
| Step 4 | Transfer the skills practiced in Step 2 and Step 3 to practice the functional tasks in accordance with the level of balance function of the participant |
Figure 1Flow chart for study.