| Literature DB >> 36188401 |
Małgorzata Eliks1,2, Ewa Gajewska1.
Abstract
According to the recommendations of the American Academy of Pediatrics, the surveillance of motor development should accompany systematic appointments with medical professionals in infancy and early childhood. One of the standardized tools for evaluating motor development is the Alberta Infant Motor Scale (AIMS). This paper aims to present assumptions and psychometric properties of the AIMS, the methodology of assessment of an infant's performance with the AIMS, and research on the validation and standardization of the AIMS as well as the use of the scale as an outcome measure. We conducted a non-systematic literature review using three electronic databases: PubMed, Scopus, and Embase (from June 1992 to February 2022). We included original research with a full-text manuscript in English. No geographical restrictions were applied. The search terms "alberta infant motor scale" AND "reliability" OR "validity" and "alberta infant motor scale" AND "norms" OR "reference" OR "standardization" were used for literature review on the validation and standardization of the AIMS in other non-Canadian populations. This narrative review also focuses on how the AIMS is applied as an outcome measure in research by presenting studies on the AIMS conducted over the last decade. Our review found that the AIMS is widely used for both research and clinical purposes. The AIMS has been used as an outcome measure in both interventional and observational studies conducted on both neurotypical infants and those with conditions affecting motor development. The advantages of the scale are its infant-friendliness, time duration of the examination, and relative ease of application for an examiner. The scale has been validated and standardized in many countries.Entities:
Keywords: Alberta Infant Motor Scale (AIMS); childhood; infancy; motor development; scale
Year: 2022 PMID: 36188401 PMCID: PMC9515325 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2022.927502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.086
The studies on the reliability and validity of the AIMS.
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| Piper et al. ( | 506 normal infants | original version | 0.99 | 2 | 0.99 | BSID I, PDMS-1, motor scales | 0.98 with BSID I, 0.97 with PDMS-1 (sample of 120 infants) |
| Jeng et al. ( | 86 preterm infants (aged 0–18 months) | no | 0.85–0.99 | 3 | 0.73–0.98 | BSID II motor scale | 0.78–0.90 (sample of 41 infants at the age of 6 and 12 months) |
| Uesugi et al. ( | 40 healthy infants (aged 22 days to 16- months 27 days) | no | 0.86–0.93 | 6 | ≥0.94 | Kyoto Scale of Physiological Development | 0.97 0.98 |
| Valentini and Saccani ( | 766 preterm and full-term infants, (aged 0–18 months) | Portuguese | 0.91–0.99 | 3 | 0.86–0.99 | Child Behavior Development Scale | 0.34 |
| Morales-Montforte et al. ( | 50 infants at risk or at diagnosis of developmental delay, [aged 0–18 months)] | Spanish | 0.94–1.00 | 2 | 0.95–1.00 | BSID III | 0.97 (0–3 months), 0.69 (4–8 months), 0.96 (9–18 months) (sample of 25 infants) |
| Wang et al. ( | 50 infants at high risk, (aged 0–9 months) | Chinese | 0.81–0.99 | 3 | 0.98–0.99 | PDMS-2 | 0.75–0.97 |
| Aimsamrarn et al. ( | 30 full-term healthy infants, (aged 0–18 months) | Thai | 0.98–0.99 | 3 | 0.98 | BSID III- scale motor | 0.97 |
| Lackovic et al. ( | 60 full-term infants at risk (aged 0–14 months) | Serbian | 0.65–0.99 | 2 | 0.65–0.99 | ||
| Ko and Lim (2022), Korean ( | 70 pre-and full-term healthy infants (aged 0–18 months) | Korean | 0.73–1.00 | 6 | 0.80–1.00 |
AIMS, Alberta Infant Motor Scale.
PDMS, Peabody Developmental Motor Scales.
BSID, Bayley Scales of Infant Development.
The studies on the standardization of the AIMS in other populations than the original.
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| Fleuren et al. ( | 100 infants (aged 0–12 months) | 2 | ___ | 0.99 | No | Overall lower scores |
| Syrengelas et al. ( | 1,068 full-term infants, (aged 7 days to 19 months) | 3 | ___ | ___ | No | No differences in all age samples between both populations |
| Gontijo et al. ( | 660 full term infants, (aged 0–18 months) | 3 | ___ | 0.93–0.97 | Portuguese | No differences in all age samples between both populations |
| De Kegel et al. ( | 270 infants, (aged 9 days−18 months 8 days) | 4 | ___ | 0.99 | No | Overall lower scores |
| Saccani et al. ( | 1,455, full- and preterm (aged 0-18 months) | 3 | ___ | 0.86–0.99 | Portuguese | Lower scores |
| Suir et al. ( | 499 developing typically infants full-and preterm(aged 2 weeks to 19 months) | 2–4 | ___ | 0.98 | No | Lower scores |
| Tupsila et al. ( | 574 full-term infants (aged 15 days to 14 months) | 3 | 0.97–0.99 (sample of 25 infants) | 0.99 | Thai | No differences in samples between 4 to 6 months, 8 to 10 months, and 12–13 months |
| van Iersel et al. ( | 1,697 pre-and full-term infants, (aged 2–18 months) | >2 | ___ | ___ | No | Overall lower scores |
| Kepenek-Varol et al. ( | 411 full-term infants, (aged 5 days-18 months) | 1 | ___ | ___ | No | No differences, except the samples aged 0–1 and 2–3 months |
AIMS, Alberta Infant Motor Scale.