| Literature DB >> 35741580 |
Emily Bellartz1,2, Milena Pertz1, Johannes Jungilligens1, Ilka Kleffner1, Jörg Wellmer3, Uwe Schlegel1, Patrizia Thoma2, Stoyan Popkirov1.
Abstract
Neurocognitive screening instruments usually require printed sheets and additional accessories, and can be unsuitable for low-threshold use during ward rounds or emergency workup, especially in patients with motor impairments. Here, we test the utility of a newly developed neuropsychology pocketcard set for point-of-care testing. For aphasia and neglect assessment, modified versions of the Language Screening Test and the Bells Test were validated on 63 and 60 acute stroke unit patients, respectively, against expert clinical evaluation and the original pen-and-paper Bells Test. The pocketcard aphasia test achieved an excellent area under the curve (AUC) of 0.94 (95% CI: 0.88-1, p < 0.001). Using an optimal cut-off of ≥2 mistakes, sensitivity was 91% and specificity was 81%. The pocketcard Bells Task, measured against the clinical neglect diagnosis, achieved higher sensitivity (89%) and specificity (88%) than the original paper-based instrument (78% and 75%, respectively). Separately, executive function tests (modified versions of the Trail Making Test [TMT] A and B, custom Stroop color naming task, vigilance 'A' Montreal Cognitive Assessment item) were validated on 44 inpatients with epilepsy against the EpiTrack® test battery. Pocketcard TMT performance was significantly correlated with the original EpiTrack® versions (A: r = 0.64, p < 0.001; B: r = 0.75, p < 0.001). AUCs for the custom Stroop task, TMT A and TMT B for discriminating between normal and pathological EpiTrack® scores were acceptable, excellent and outstanding, respectively. Quick point-of-care testing using a pocketcard set is feasible and yields diagnostically valid information.Entities:
Keywords: aphasia; epilepsy; executive functions; neglect; neuropsychology; pocketcard; stroke
Year: 2022 PMID: 35741580 PMCID: PMC9221077 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci12060694
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Figure 1Neuropsychology pocketcard set. The four pages of the pocketcard set used in this study, including tests for aphasia (a), neglect (b) and executive functions (c,d).
Neglect testing procedures compared with overall clinical judgement by the treating stroke unit team.
| Test | Sample Size | Sensitivity | Specificity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Original Bells Test * | 60 | 77.8% | 74.5% |
| Modified pocketcard Bells Test | 60 | 88.9% | 88.2% |
| Tactile extinction | 60 | 33.3% | 95.0% |
| Visual extinction | 61 | 60.0% | 92.2% |
| Combined extinction testing | 61 | 60.0% | 92.2% |
* using literature cut-off.
Screening test performance regarding pathological impairment of executive function detected through EpiTrack® (n = 42).
| Pocketcard Test | AUC (95% CI; | Youden Index | Optimal Cut-Off | Sensitivity | Specificity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TMT A (errors) | 0.56 (0.33–0.78; 0.613) | 0.11 | ≥1 error | 11% | 100% |
| TMT B (errors) | 0.79 (0.61–0.97; 0.008) | 0.50 | ≥1 error | 78% | 73% |
| TMT A (duration) | 0.81 (0.63–0.98; 0.005) | 0.57 | ≥7 s | 67% | 90% |
| TMT B (duration) | 0.92 (0.81–1; <0.001) | 0.75 | ≥48 s | 78% | 97% |
| Stroop Test | 0.79 (0.61–0.97; 0.008) | 0.63 | ≥1 error * | 78% | 85% |
| Vigilance item | 0.67 (0.45–0.88; 0.13) | 0.31 | ≥1 error | 56% | 76% |
* not self-corrected.