Morganti B, Scivoletto G, Ditunno P, Ditunno J F, Molinari M
Spinal Cord Unit, IRCCS Fondazione S. Lucia, Rome, Italy.
Spinal Cord. 2005 Jan;43(1):27-33. doi: 10.1038/sj.sc.3101658.
Retrospective examination.
To compare the Walking Index for Spinal Cord Injury (WISCI) and current scales for their sensitivity to walking changes in subjects with a spinal cord lesion (SCL) and further validate the WISCI for use in clinical trails.
A large rehabilitation hospital in the center of Italy.
Retrospective review was performed on 284 patient records with an SCL. Measurements included neurological evaluation with Lower Extremity Motor Scores (LEMS) according to the American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) and walking status assessed by Barthel Index (BI (0-15)), Rivermead Mobility Index (RMI (three levels)), Functional Independence Measure (FIM (1-7)), Spinal Cord Independence Measure (SCIM (0-8)), and WISCI (0-20). The WISCI is a 21-level hierarchical scale which incorporates gradations of physical assistance and devices required for walking. Improvement in walking is based on the change of scores from admission to discharge. Statistical analysis included Spearman rank correlation and chi2 test; P<0.05.
There was a significant positive correlation between WISCI and other scales (WISCI and BI r=0.67, P<0.001; WISCI and RMI r=0.67, P<0.001; WISCI and SCIM r=0.97, P<0.001; WISCI and FIM r=0.7, P<0.001). The initial ASIA grade was predictive of mobility outcome on the WISCI: of the 78 ASIA A patients, only five achieved independent walking versus 4/17 ASIA B (P=0.02), 56/109 ASIA C (P<0.001) and 39/44 ASIA D (P<0.001). The correlation of LEMS to the WISCI was 0.58 (P<0.001). At discharge, patients were distributed into 12 WISCI levels versus four FIM, three BI, two RMI and five SCIM levels. The most frequent WISCI levels at discharge were 13 (walker, no braces or assistance), 16 (two crutches, no braces or assistance) and 20 (no devices or assistance).
Similar correlation between the WISCI and the other scales indicates that all these measures address the same concept, mobility, which is a measure of concurrent validity. The correlation is not 100% because of conceptual differences (the WISCI incorporates gradations of physical assistance and devices required for walking while most of the other scales focus on burden of care or mobility in the environment). The WISCI is more detailed and appears more sensitive to walking recovery than the other scales, as demonstrated by our patients' score distribution at discharge. Within each of the most frequent WISCI levels (13, 16, 20) LEMS and other walking features varied; therefore the scale would benefit from further refinement based on speed, distance and energy cost.
回顾性研究。
比较脊髓损伤步行指数(WISCI)与现有量表对脊髓损伤(SCL)患者步行变化的敏感性,并进一步验证WISCI在临床试验中的应用。
意大利中部的一家大型康复医院。
对284例SCL患者的病历进行回顾性分析。测量指标包括根据美国脊髓损伤协会(ASIA)的下肢运动评分(LEMS)进行的神经学评估,以及通过Barthel指数(BI(0 - 15))、Rivermead运动指数(RMI(三个等级))、功能独立性测量(FIM(1 - 7))、脊髓独立性测量(SCIM(0 - 8))和WISCI(0 - 20)评估的步行状态。WISCI是一个21级分层量表,纳入了步行所需的身体辅助和器械的等级。步行改善基于入院到出院的评分变化。统计分析包括Spearman等级相关性分析和卡方检验;P<0.05。
WISCI与其他量表之间存在显著正相关(WISCI与BI,r = 0.67,P<0.001;WISCI与RMI,r = 0.67,P<0.001;WISCI与SCIM,r = 0.97,P<0.001;WISCI与FIM,r = 0.7,P<0.001)。初始ASIA分级可预测WISCI的运动结局:在78例ASIA A级患者中,只有5例实现独立步行,而ASIA B级患者中有4/17例(P = 0.02),ASIA C级患者中有56/109例(P<0.001),ASIA D级患者中有39/44例(P<0.001)。LEMS与WISCI的相关性为0.58(P<0.001)。出院时,患者分布在12个WISCI等级,而FIM为4个等级,BI为3个等级,RMI为2个等级,SCIM为5个等级。出院时最常见的WISCI等级为13(使用步行器,无需支具或辅助)、16(使用双拐,无需支具或辅助)和20(无需器械或辅助)。
WISCI与其他量表之间的相似相关性表明,所有这些测量方法都涉及相同的概念,即运动能力,这是一种同时效度的测量方法。由于概念上的差异,相关性并非100%(WISCI纳入了步行所需的身体辅助和器械的等级,而其他大多数量表侧重于护理负担或环境中的运动能力)。如我们患者出院时的评分分布所示,WISCI比其他量表更详细,对步行恢复似乎更敏感。在每个最常见的WISCI等级(13、16、20)内,LEMS和其他步行特征各不相同;因此,该量表将受益于基于速度、距离和能量消耗的进一步细化。