Coulter R A, Shallo-Hoffmann J
College of Optometry, Nova Southeastern University, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33328, USA.
Optom Vis Sci. 2000 Aug;77(8):428-32. doi: 10.1097/00006324-200008000-00010.
The developmental eye movement (DEM) test is a clinical test used widely to evaluate ocular motility function (accuracy and speed) in school-age children.
The purpose of this study was to investigate, retrospectively, the change in accuracy over time while performing the DEM horizontal reading task in children.
The charts from children who had performed the DEM test during a routine eye examination in a pediatric optometry service were reviewed. The study included 22 patients (6 to 11 years old, 12 boys, 10 girls) who had a routine eye examination that was precepted by one of the authors (R.C.) during the period of 1995 to 1999. Patients were divided into two categories: 1) those with abnormal DEM test results and 2) a control group consisting of those with normal DEM test results. Chart review was done consecutively within each category. Collected data included patient age, gender, refractive error, and DEM test results. For analysis, the horizontal task of the DEM was divided into two halves (I and II), Part I always preceded part II, and data was sorted as the number of errors per part.
More errors in accuracy occurred in part II than in part I (Wilcoxon signed rank test, p < or = 0.01) of the horizontal DEM test in the group of subjects with an abnormal DEM test. No differences in the number of errors in parts I and II of the horizontal task of the DEM were found in the control group.
Findings showed that when excessive errors in accuracy occurred, the number of errors increased over time. If the errors were caused by an oculomotor dysfunction found in the DEM, errors should be equally distributed throughout the text. If errors were caused by fatigue, a difference in parts I and II should have occurred in both the test and the control group. These findings suggest that attention may influence accuracy over time in those patients that do poorly on the DEM test.
发育性眼动(DEM)测试是一项广泛用于评估学龄儿童眼球运动功能(准确性和速度)的临床测试。
本研究的目的是回顾性调查儿童在进行DEM水平阅读任务时准确性随时间的变化。
回顾了在小儿验光服务的常规眼部检查中进行过DEM测试的儿童的病历。该研究包括22例患者(6至11岁,12名男孩,10名女孩),他们在1995年至1999年期间由作者之一(R.C.)指导进行了常规眼部检查。患者分为两类:1)DEM测试结果异常的患者;2)由DEM测试结果正常的患者组成的对照组。在每个类别中连续进行病历审查。收集的数据包括患者年龄、性别、屈光不正和DEM测试结果。为了进行分析,将DEM的水平任务分为两半(I和II),第一部分总是先于第二部分,数据按每部分的错误数量进行分类。
在DEM测试异常的受试者组中,水平DEM测试的第二部分比第一部分出现的准确性错误更多(Wilcoxon符号秩检验,p≤0.01)。在对照组中,DEM水平任务的第一部分和第二部分的错误数量没有差异。
研究结果表明,当出现过多的准确性错误时,错误数量会随着时间增加。如果错误是由DEM中发现的眼球运动功能障碍引起的,那么错误应该均匀分布在整个文本中。如果错误是由疲劳引起的,那么在测试组和对照组的第一部分和第二部分都应该出现差异。这些发现表明,注意力可能会影响在DEM测试中表现不佳的患者随着时间推移的准确性。