Article

iVOMS: Instrumented Vestibular / Ocular motor screen in healthy controls and mild traumatic brain injury

Details

Citation

Graham L, Powell D, Campbell KR, Morris R, Vitorio R, Parrington L, Antonellis P, Godfrey A, King LA & Stuart S (2024) iVOMS: Instrumented Vestibular / Ocular motor screen in healthy controls and mild traumatic brain injury. Medical Engineering & Physics, 129, Art. No.: 104180. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.medengphy.2024.104180

Abstract
Objective Vestibular/ocular deficits occur with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). The vestibular/ocular motor screening (VOMS) tool is used to assess individuals post-mTBI, which primarily relies upon subjective self-reported symptoms. Instrumenting the VOMS (iVOMS) with technology may allow for more objective assessment post-mTBI, which reflects actual task performance. This study aimed to validate the iVOMS analytically and clinically in mTBI and controls. Methods Seventy-nine people with sub-acute mTBI (<12 weeks post-injury) and forty-four healthy control participants performed the VOMS whilst wearing a mobile eye-tracking on a one-off visit. People with mTBI were included if they were within 12 weeks of a physician diagnosis. Participants were excluded if they had any musculoskeletal, neurological or sensory deficits which could explain dysfunction. A series of custom-made eye tracking algorithms were used to assess recorded eye-movements. Results The iVOMS was analytically valid compared to the reference (ICC2,1 0.85–0.99) in mTBI and controls. The iVOMS outcomes were clinically valid as there were significant differences between groups for convergence, vertical saccades, smooth pursuit, vestibular ocular reflex and visual motion sensitivity outcomes. However, there was no significant relationship between iVOMS outcomes and self-reported symptoms. Conclusion The iVOMS is analytically and clinically valid in mTBI and controls, but further work is required to examine the sensitivity of iVOMS outcomes across the mTBI spectrum. Findings also highlighted that symptom and physiological issue resolution post-mTBI may not coincide and relationships need further examination.

Keywords
mTBI; Eye movement; Eye-tracking; Biomarker; VOMS; Vestibular; Ocular

Journal
Medical Engineering & Physics: Volume 129

StatusPublished
FundersNorthumbria University
Publication date31/07/2024
Publication date online08/05/2024
Date accepted by journal06/05/2024
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/36308
PublisherElsevier BV
ISSN1350-4533

People (1)

Dr Dylan Powell

Dr Dylan Powell

Lecturer in Public Health & Innovation, Health Sciences Stirling

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