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Clinical Trial
. 2003 Mar;84(3):343-9.
doi: 10.1053/apmr.2003.50034.

An assessment of gait and balance deficits after traumatic brain injury

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

An assessment of gait and balance deficits after traumatic brain injury

Jeffrey R Basford et al. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2003 Mar.

Abstract

Objective: To assess the sensations of instability that many patients report after traumatic brain injury (TBI).

Design: A controlled study.

Setting: A motion analysis and vestibular and balance laboratory.

Participants: Twenty subjects, 10 with TBI and complaints of instability, and 10 without TBI.

Interventions: Balance and gait analysis.

Main outcome measures: Dizziness Handicap Inventory (DHI), caloric irrigation, optokinetic testing, Dix-Hallpike Test, posturography, and center of mass (COM) movement.

Results: Subjects were well matched in terms of age, height, weight, and gender. DHI scores of those with and without TBI differed significantly (32.2+/-23.0 vs 0.2+/-0.63, P<.001). Caloric and optokinetic circularvection testing were abnormal only in subjects with TBI (8/10 and 4/10, respectively). Benign paroxysmal positioning vertigo was present in only 3 subjects with TBI, and this either resolved spontaneously (n=1) or was successfully treated (n=2). Composite posturography scores of those with and without TBI differed significantly (69.6+/-35.8 vs 79.5+/-40.5, P=.02). Gait parameters also differed significantly between the groups (P=.05), with the subjects with TBI having lower anterior and posterior and higher medial and lateral COM displacements and velocities.

Conclusions: Patients' complaints of instability after TBI may have objective correlates and may be rectifiable. Balance and gait testing in these patients is warranted.

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