Department of Biomedical Engineering, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, USA.
J Neuroeng Rehabil. 2022 Nov 9;19(1):120. doi: 10.1186/s12984-022-01109-0.
Balance stabilization exercises are often prescribed to facilitate compensation in individuals with vestibular schwannoma (VS). However, both the assessment and prescription of these exercises are reliant on clinical observations and expert opinion rather than on quantitative evidence. The aim of this study was to quantify head motion kinematics in individuals with vestibular loss while they performed commonly prescribed balance stability exercises.
Using inertial measurement units, head movements of individuals with vestibular schwannoma were measured before and after surgical deafferentation and compared with age-matched controls.
We found that individuals with vestibular schwannoma experienced more variable head motion compared to healthy controls both pre- and postoperatively, particularly in absence of visual input, but that there was little difference between preoperative and postoperative kinematic measurements for our vestibular schwannoma group. We further found correlations between head motion kinematic measures during balance exercises, performed in the absence of visual input, and multiple clinical measurements for preoperative VS subjects. Subjects with higher head motion variability also had worse DVA scores, moved more slowly during the Timed up and Go and gait speed tests, and had lower scores on the functional gait assessment. In contrast, we did not find strong correlations between clinical measures and postoperative head kinematics for the same VS subjects.
Our data suggest that further development of such metrics based on the quantification of head motion has merit for the assessment and prescription of balance exercises, as demonstrated by the calculation of a "kinematic score" for identifying the most informative balance exercise (i.e., "Standing on foam eyes closed").
平衡稳定练习常用于促进前庭神经鞘瘤(VS)患者的代偿。然而,这些练习的评估和处方都依赖于临床观察和专家意见,而不是定量证据。本研究的目的是量化前庭功能丧失患者在进行常见平衡稳定性练习时的头部运动运动学。
使用惯性测量单元,测量前庭神经鞘瘤患者手术去传入前后的头部运动,并与年龄匹配的对照组进行比较。
我们发现,前庭神经鞘瘤患者在手术前后的头部运动比健康对照组更具可变性,尤其是在没有视觉输入的情况下,但我们的前庭神经鞘瘤组的术前和术后运动学测量值之间几乎没有差异。我们还发现,在没有视觉输入的情况下进行平衡练习时的头部运动运动学测量值与术前 VS 患者的多项临床测量值之间存在相关性。头部运动变异性较高的患者 DVA 评分也较差,在 Timed up and Go 和步态速度测试中移动速度较慢,功能步态评估得分也较低。相比之下,我们并没有发现同一 VS 患者的临床测量值与术后头部运动学之间存在很强的相关性。
我们的数据表明,基于头部运动量化的此类指标的进一步发展对于平衡练习的评估和处方具有重要意义,正如通过计算“运动学评分”来识别最具信息量的平衡练习(即“站在泡沫上闭眼”)所证明的那样。