| Literature DB >> 32712867 |
E C Martin1, C Leue2, P Delespaul2, F Peeters3, A M L Janssen4,5, R Lousberg2, A Erdkamp6, S van de Weijer6, J Widdershoven1, H Blom7, T Bruintjes8, A Zwergal9, E Grill10, N Guinand11, A Perez-Fornos11, M R van de Berg1, J J A Stultiens1, H Kingma1,12, R van de Berg13,14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Most questionnaires currently used for assessing symptomatology of vestibular disorders are retrospective, inducing recall bias and lowering ecological validity. An app-based diary, administered multiple times in daily life, could increase the accuracy and ecological validity of symptom measurement. The objective of this study was to introduce a new experience sampling method (ESM) based vestibular diary app (DizzyQuest), evaluate response rates, and to provide examples of DizzyQuest outcome measures which can be used in future research.Entities:
Keywords: DizzyQuest; Experience sampling; Vestibular disorders
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32712867 PMCID: PMC7718207 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-020-10092-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Questionnaires used in the DizzyQuest
| Questionnaire | Focus | Nature | Frequency in this study |
|---|---|---|---|
| Morning (7 questions) | Quality of sleep past night | Retrospective | Daily in first week |
| Within-day (23 questions) | Real-time symptoms in daily life context | Momentary (= ESM) | Ten times a day at semi-random moments in the first week |
| Evening (27 questions) | Symptoms of the past day | Retrospective | Daily during 4 weeks |
| Attack (5 questions) | Symptoms of attack | Retrospective | After an attack of vertigo or dizziness |
Possible outcome measures of the DizzyQuest (on individual level)
| Outcome measure | Facilitating questionnaire |
|---|---|
| Behaviour of symptoms during the day | Within-day |
| Behaviour of symptoms between days | Morning |
| Within-day | |
| Evening | |
| Appearance of neuro-otological symptoms in relation to psychosocial context | Morning |
| Within-day | |
| Evening | |
| Frequency and nature of attack of vertigo or dizziness | Attack |
| Evening |
Characteristics of patients who dropped out during this study
| Patient number | Diagnosis | Gender | Age (years) | Reason for drop-out |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | VM/PPPD | Female | 63 | Prioritized treatment for another medical disorder |
| 2 | MD | Female | 43 | Could not combine the application with work |
| 3 | MD | Female | 37 | Changed her mind regarding participation after inclusion in study |
| 4 | BV | Female | 44 | Prioritized treatment for another medical disorder |
| 5 | PPPD | Female | 51 | Technical problems: did not receive evening questionnaires after using another device |
| 6 | MD | Female | 59 | Technical problems: incorrect login |
| 7 | MD | Female | 52 | Technical problems: incorrect login |
| 8 | MD | Male | 59 | Frequency of within-day questionnaires was too high to combine participation in this study with personal life |
| 9 | DFNA9 | Male | 70 | Technical problems: dissatisfied about the application |
| 10 | MD | Female | 64 | Personal circumstances |
| 11 | UVP | Female | 61 | Technical problems: application did not work properly |
| 12 | MD | Female | 44 | Death of family member |
VM vestibular migraine, PPPD persistent postural perceptual dizziness, MD Menière’s disease, UVP unilateral vestibulopathy, DFNA9 genetic type of cochleovestibular dysfunction, leading to deafness and bilateral vestibulopathy
Fig. 1The average response rates of fully completed questionnaires of the DizzyQuest. Error bars indicate 95% confidence intervals of average response rates of all participants on the specific questionnaire. The black horizontal bar indicates the desired response rate of > 50%. Asterisks indicate a statistically significant difference in response rate from the desired > 50% response rate
Fig. 2a, b Examples of DizzyQuest results of a patient with Menière’s disease regarding imbalance (red) and general well-being (blue) during one specific day and 1 month, as a representative sample of results obtained in this study. Likert scores on the y-axes vary from 1 (not at all) to 7 (very). a Illustrates the results of the 10 within-day-questionnaires that were administered on day five of the study. b Illustrates the results of the evening questionnaires obtained during 28 consecutive days
Fig. 3a, b Average daily scores of imbalance (red, a) and general well-being (blue, b) obtained with the within-day-questionnaires that were administered 10 times a day during six consecutive days, in the same patient with Menière’s disease. Dots represent the average scores of all completed within-day-questionnaires during a specific day. Error-bars show the 95% confidence intervals
Fig. 4Mean reported frequency (%) of neuro-otological symptoms, obtained with the within-day questionnaire, during six consecutive days in 51 patients, divided in three subgroups of vestibular disorders. Asterisks above a subgroup bar indicate a statistically significant difference in reported frequency of a symptom in that specific subgroup, compared to the other two
Results of the mixed-effects linear regression analyses regarding the appearance of three neuro-otological symptoms and two questions about positive affect and negative affect, calculated for three subgroups of vestibular disorders
| Symptoms | Questions regarding positive affect and negative affect | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I generally feel well at the moment | I’m worrying about things | |||||||
| Estimate | 95% CI | Estimate | 95% CI | |||||
| Lower | Upper | Lower | Upper | |||||
| Imbalance = no | − 0.466a | − 0.697 | − 0.234 | < 0.001* | 0.193a | 0.044 | 0.341 | 0.014* |
| Tinnitus = no | − 0.413a | − 0.670 | − 0.155 | 0.003* | 0.177a | − 0.057 | 0.411 | 0.132 |
| Visual problems when moving = no | BV: − 0.234 | − 0.440 | 0.029 | 0.025* | 0.12a | − 0.046 | 0.290 | 0.156 |
| Other: − 1.163 | − 1.877 | − 0.450 | 0.001* | |||||
| MD: − 0.147 | − 0.624 | 0.331 | 0.547 | |||||
BV bilateral vestibulopathy, MD Menière’s disease
*p < 0.05
aApplicable to all subgroups