Wang Li-Chin, Montgomery Amy, Smerdely Peter, Paulik Olivia, Barton Cherie, Halcomb Elizabeth, Hui Heidi Hoi Ying, Pieri Carolyn, Lopez Maria Rios, Teus Judeil, McErlean Gemma
Department of Aged Care, Gosford Hospital, Gosford, Australia.
School of Nursing, Faculty of Science, Medicine and Health, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia.
Age Ageing. 2025 May 3;54(5). doi: 10.1093/ageing/afaf117.
Behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) are complex neuropsychiatric symptoms that contribute to caregiver strain, increased rates of institutionalisation and reduced quality of life. Virtual reality (VR) has gained interest as a non-pharmacological approach to potentially reduce BPSD severity.
This review sought to synthesise evidence on the effectiveness of VR in reducing BPSD severity, while exploring its acceptability, safety, and optimal dosage in dementia care.
MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL and SCOPUS were searched for randomised and quasi-experimental trials assessing VR's effect on BPSD. JBI critical appraisal checklists were used to assess methodological quality. Findings were presented narratively, with meta-analysis performed on a subset of BPSD symptoms where data were available.
Of the ten included studies, four found no significant change in overall BPSD. Mixed findings were observed for individual BPSD symptoms. Meta-analysis showed a significant reduction in depressive symptoms (mean diff -0.38, P= .026) and no reduction in agitation (mean diff 1.87, P = .2). Two studies reported reduced aggression and mixed findings were found for anxiety. Reduced apathy was observed in one study following each VR session and during the session in another. VR was generally well-accepted with few side effects reported.
VR appears to be an acceptable non-pharmacological intervention for BPSD reduction. However, the limited available studies, methodological variations and quality issues suggest the need for future larger-scale research to confirm its efficacy and effectiveness.
痴呆的行为和心理症状(BPSD)是复杂的神经精神症状,会导致照料者压力增大、机构化比率升高以及生活质量下降。虚拟现实(VR)作为一种潜在的非药物方法,可减轻BPSD的严重程度,已引起人们的关注。
本综述旨在综合关于VR减轻BPSD严重程度有效性的证据,同时探讨其在痴呆护理中的可接受性、安全性和最佳剂量。
检索MEDLINE、EMBASE、CINAHL和SCOPUS数据库,查找评估VR对BPSD影响的随机和半实验性试验。使用JBI批判性评价清单评估方法学质量。研究结果采用叙述性呈现,对部分有数据的BPSD症状进行荟萃分析。
纳入的10项研究中,4项发现BPSD总体无显著变化。个别BPSD症状的研究结果不一。荟萃分析显示抑郁症状显著减轻(平均差异-0.38,P = 0.026),而激越症状无减轻(平均差异1.87,P = 0.2)。两项研究报告攻击行为减少,焦虑症状的研究结果不一。一项研究发现每次VR治疗后冷漠症状减轻,另一项研究发现治疗期间冷漠症状减轻。VR总体上被广泛接受,报告的副作用很少。
VR似乎是一种可接受的减轻BPSD的非药物干预措施。然而,现有研究有限、方法学差异和质量问题表明,未来需要进行更大规模的研究来证实其疗效和有效性。