Green Robin E A, Melo Brenda, Christensen Bruce, Ngo Le-Anh, Monette Georges, Bradbury Cheryl
Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, University Center, ON, Canada.
J Clin Exp Neuropsychol. 2008 Feb;30(2):163-72. doi: 10.1080/13803390701300524.
Estimation of premorbid IQ in traumatic brain injury (TBI) is clinically and scientifically valuable because it permits the quantification of the cognitive impact of injury. This is achieved by comparing performances on tests of current ability to estimates of premorbid IQ, thereby enabling current capacity to be interpreted in light of preinjury ability. However, the validity of premorbid IQ tests that are commonly used for TBI has been questioned. In the present study, we examined the psychometric properties of a recently developed test, the Wechsler Test of Adult Reading (WTAR), which has yet to be examined for TBI. The cognitive performance of a group of 24 patients recovering from TBI (with a mean Glasgow Coma Scale score in the severely impaired range) was measured at 2 and 5 months postinjury. On both occasions, patients were administered three tests that have been used to measure premorbid IQ (the WTAR and the Vocabulary and Matrix Reasoning subtests of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale 3rd Edition, WAIS-III) and three tests of current ability (Symbol Digit Modalities Test-Oral and Similarities and Block Design subtests of the WAIS-III). We found that performance significantly improved on tests of current cognitive ability, confirming recovery. In contrast, stable performance was observed on the WTAR from Assessment 1 (M = 34.25/50) to Assessment 2 (M = 34.21/50; r = .970, p < .001). Mean improvement across assessments was negligible (t = -0.086, p = .47; Cohen's d = -.005), and minimal individual participant change was observed (modal scaled score change = 0). WTAR scores were also highly similar to scores on a demographic estimate of premorbid IQ. Thus, converging evidence--high stability during recovery from TBI and similar IQ estimates to those of a demographic equation suggests that the WTAR is a valid measure of premorbid IQ for TBI. Where word pronunciation tests are indicated (i.e., in patients for whom English is spoken and read fluently), these results endorse the use of the WTAR for patients with TBI.
评估创伤性脑损伤(TBI)患者病前智商在临床和科学上具有重要价值,因为它能够量化损伤对认知的影响。这是通过将当前能力测试的表现与病前智商估计值进行比较来实现的,从而能够根据伤前能力来解释当前的能力水平。然而,常用于TBI的病前智商测试的有效性受到了质疑。在本研究中,我们检验了最近开发的一种测试——韦氏成人阅读测验(WTAR)的心理测量特性,该测验尚未针对TBI进行检验。对一组24名从TBI中恢复的患者(格拉斯哥昏迷量表平均得分处于严重受损范围)在受伤后2个月和5个月时的认知表现进行了测量。在这两个时间点,患者都接受了三项用于测量病前智商的测试(WTAR以及韦氏成人智力量表第三版(WAIS - III)的词汇和矩阵推理分测验)和三项当前能力测试(符号数字模式测验 - 口语以及WAIS - III的相似性和积木设计分测验)。我们发现,当前认知能力测试的表现显著改善,证实了恢复情况。相比之下,从评估1(M = 34.25/五十)到评估2(M = 34.21/五十;r = 0.970,p < 0.001),WTAR的表现保持稳定。各评估之间的平均改善可忽略不计(t = -0.086,p = 0.47;科恩d值 = -0.005),且观察到个体参与者的变化极小(模式量表得分变化 = 0)。WTAR分数也与病前智商的人口统计学估计得分高度相似。因此,越来越多的证据——从TBI恢复过程中的高稳定性以及与人口统计学方程得出的智商估计值相似——表明WTAR是TBI患者病前智商的有效测量方法。在需要进行单词发音测试的情况下(即对于能流利说英语和读英语的患者),这些结果支持对TBI患者使用WTAR。