Oculomotor rehabilitation in acquired brain injury: A case series1☆
Presented in part to the American Academy of Optometry, December 2002, San Diego, CA, and the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, May 2003, Fort Lauderdale, FL.
Abstract
Kapoor N, Ciuffreda KJ, Han Y. Oculomotor rehabilitation in acquired brain injury: a case series. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2004;85:1667–78.
Objective
To investigate the effects of systematic, oculomotor rehabilitation on basic versional ocular motility, as well as reading eye movements, in subjects with acquired brain injury, using objective eye movement recording and subjective rating of reading ability.
Design
Case series.
Setting
Clinical research laboratory.
Participants
Two men with acquired brain injury: one with traumatic brain injury and one with stroke.
Interventions
Versional oculomotor training was performed for 1 hour, twice weekly for 8 weeks. There were 2 feedback modes of training: normal internal oculomotor visual feedback alone (4wk), or that feedback in conjunction with external oculomotor auditory feedback (4wk). Testing was conducted before and after training.
Main outcome measures
Objective outcome measures included both basic eye movement parameters (fixational accuracy, saccadic gain and latency, pursuit gain, mean saccade frequency ratio for simulated reading), and reading eye movement parameters (words per minute, grade level equivalent, fixations per 100 words, regressions per 100 words, percentage of reading comprehension, duration of fixation in seconds). Subjective outcome measures included the subject’s ability to read based on the responses to the reading rating-scale questionnaire.
Results
Both subjects improved objectively in terms of basic versional oculomotor accuracy and reading ability. These findings concurred with their subjective impressions.
Conclusions
This case series provides objective documentation of the positive effects of oculomotor rehabilitation on basic ocular motility and reading ability in selected cases with acquired brain injury, thus suggesting the need for a larger clinical trial in this area.
aDepartments of Clinical Science, New York, NY, USA
bVision Sciences, SUNY/State College of Optometry, Raymond J. Greenwald Rehabilitation Center, New York, NY, USA
Reprint requests to Neera Kapoor, OD, MS, Dept of Clinical Science, SUNY/State College of Optometry, Raymond J. Greenwald Rehabilitation Center, 33 W 42nd St, New York, NY, 10036, USA
☆ Supported by the Jacob and Valeria Langeloth Foundation (project no. 177).
1 No commercial party having a direct financial interest in the results of the research supporting this article has or will confer a benefit on the author(s) or on any organization with which the author(s) is/are associated.