## Abstract There is little agreement on which outcome measures to use to express the efficacy of treatments for cervical dystonia. We analyzed change scores on various scales of 64 new patients with cervical dystonia before and after repeated injections with botulinum toxin. Method: The associati
Treatment outcomes in cervical dystonia: A clinimetric study
β Scribed by Dr. R. Lindeboom; R. J. de Haan; M. Aramideh; J. W. M. Brans; J. D. Speelman
- Book ID
- 102947411
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 605 KB
- Volume
- 11
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-3185
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
We reviewed 21 studies (8 blinded and 13 open) on the treatment of botulinum toxin type A for cervical dystonia, directed to the health aspects used to evaluate the patients' response to treatment (Medline search 1985β1993, English language literature). The prerequisite for comparing the treatment results was that studies had to evaluate similar aspects of disease. The ICIDH model, outlined by the World Health Organization in 1980, orders the different health outcomes into distinct classes of disease consequences. Our aim was to order the health outcomes according to the model and, thus, to study the comparability of treatment outcomes. Three differences could be identified between the objective and the subjective instruments. (a) The aspects measured by the subjective instruments varied substantially; of the 22 different subjective instruments identified in 18 studies, 8 measured impairments, 5 disability, and 9 could not be classified according to the ICIDH model. The objective instruments measured impairments. (b) All objective instruments were multiitem, whereas only 2 of 22 subjective instruments could be identified as multiitem. (c) The subjective instruments were generally poorly documented with regard to the number of items, score range, or grading. We conclude that the treatment outcomes can only be compared on the objective level of assessment and with regard to the patients with painful dystonia. The subjective instruments, particularly those focusing on diseaseβspecific disability, deserve further research. The ICIDH model offers a useful framework for selection, improvement, and development of outcome instruments. Because the model clearly demarcates the different consequences of disease, adoption will enhance the comparability of outcomes in cervical dystonia intervention trials.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Here we report a 63βyearβold woman with primary cervical dystonia (CD) whose symptoms subsided for more than 30 years following a unilateral stereotactic subthalamotomy contralateral to the overactive left sternocleidomastoid muscle but then gradually recurred over a period of several m
## Abstract Decisions on treatment choice for patients are based on trials and outcome studies that are wholly dependent upon the scientific quality of the rating scales used. This study reviewed rating scales used in cervical dystonia outcome research to determine the extent that they satisfy reco