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Neuroscience ; 537: 47-57, 2024 Jan 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38006964

ABSTRACT

Despite the recommendation of improving assessment objectivity and frequency, the use of immersive virtual reality to measure and quantify movement quality remains underexplored. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the reliability, validity and usability of an immersive virtual reality application, KinematicsVR, to assess upper limb kinematics among older adults with and without major neurocognitive disorder. The KinematicsVR involves the drawing of three-dimensional straight lines, circles and squares using a controller in a virtual environment. Twenty-eight older adults with or without major neurocognitive disorder were recruited. Reliability was evaluated through correlations on test-retest and validity through correlations between KinematicsVR variables and other functional tests (TEMPA, BBT-VR and Finger-Nose Test). The usability of the KinematicsVR was assessed with the System Usability Scale questionnaire. Kinematic indexes were compared between eight adults with major neurocognitive disorder and eight matched controls. Results indicated that most variables provided by the KinematicsVR had excellent reliability for tasks involving the drawing of straight lines and circles, but moderate reliability for tasks involving the drawing of squares. Secondary analyses showed that the usability of the application was excellent but few significant and strong correlations were observed between variables of the KinematicsVR and the scores of the TEMPA scale, Finger-Nose Test and BBT-VR. Adults with major neurocognitive disorder, when compared to other older adults, made larger and less linear hand movements. These findings provide perspectives for the use of immersive virtual reality to improve assessment frequency and objectivity through the autonomous measure of upper limb kinematics in older adults.


Subject(s)
Arm , Virtual Reality , Humans , Aged , Cross-Sectional Studies , Biomechanical Phenomena , Reproducibility of Results , Neurocognitive Disorders
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