Title of article :
Understanding the Connection between Cognitive Impairment and Mobility: What Can Be Gained from Neuropsychological Assessment ?
Author/Authors :
Lazar, Ronald M. Stroke Division - Department of Neurology - Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons - New York - NY, USA , Pavol, Marykay A. Stroke Division - Department of Neurology - Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons - New York - NY, USA , Marshall, Randolph S. Stroke Division - Department of Neurology - Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons - New York - NY, USA , Stein, Joel Department of Rehabilitation and Regenerative Medicine - Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons - New York - NY, USA , Sorkin, Lyssa Y. Department of Rehabilitation and Regenerative Medicine - Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons - New York - NY, USA , Kabir, Foyruz M. Columbia University - New York - NY, USA , Yip, Jonathan Columbia University - New York - NY, USA
Abstract :
The ability of neuropsychological tests to predict rehabilitation outcome is unclear, particularly when other ratings of cognition are
available. Neuropsychological test scores and functional ratings of cognition (Functional Independence Measure (FIM) Cognition
score) were used to predict improvement in patient mobility and self-care skill, as measured by the FIM Motor score. Regression
models used both raw neuropsychology test scores and age-adjusted scores. Retrospective chart review was performed for patients
on an inpatient rehabilitation unit and referred for neuropsychological assessment. The group included 126 subjects (average age
64.2 ±17.1 years) and a variety of medical diagnoses. Neuropsychological tests included the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of
Neuropsychological Status (RBANS). After forcing the Admission FIM Cognition score into the model, RBANS scores and duration
of rehabilitation predicted FIM Motor improvements (𝐹=11.42, 𝑝<0.0001). Raw neuropsychological test scores performed better
than the model with age-adjusted test scores. FIM Cognition alone did not predict FIM Motor improvements. Neuropsychological
tests, combined with duration of rehabilitation, predicted mobility gains for patients undergoing inpatient rehabilitation beyond
what was predicted by another, readily available, assessment of cognition. Neuropsychology raw scores performed better than age-
adjusted scores, raising questions about the standard use of demographic adjustments for predicting real-world function.
Keywords :
Understanding , Connection , Cognitive Impairment , Mobility , Gained , Neuropsychological Assessment , Functional Independence Measure (FIM) , RBANS
Journal title :
Rehabilitation Research and Practice