Fatigue Scale for Motor and Cognitive Function (FSMC)
The FSMC is an assessment of MS-related cognitive and motor fatigue. A Likert-type 5-point scale (ranging from 'does not apply at all' to 'applies completely') produces a score between 1 and 5 for each scored question. Thus minimum value is 20 (no fatigue at all) and maximum value is 100 (severest grade of fatigue). Two subscales (mental and physical fatigue) can be made. Items included in the subscale mental are 1-4-7-8-11-13-15-17-18-20 and items included in the subscale physical are 2-3-5-6-9-10-12-14-16-19.
Berg Balance Scale (BBS)
BBS is used to objectively determine a patient's ability (or inability) to safely balance during a series of predetermined tasks. It is a 14 item list with each item consisting of a five-point ordinal scale ranging from 0 to 4, with 0 indicating the lowest level of function and 4 the highest level of function and takes approximately 20 minutes to complete. It does not include the assessment of gait.
Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB)
SPPB is an objective measurement instrument of balance, lower extremity strength, and functional capacity in older adults (>65 years of age). Three domains, which include balance, usual or self-selected gait speed, and lower limb strength, are assessed by a three-stage balance test (feet side-by-side, semitandem, and tandem positions), a 3-m or 4-m gait speed test (time spent to walk the course), and a repetitive chair stand test (five times chair sit-to-stand test), respectively. A 0- to 12-point scale is used to score the sum of the three assessments with higher point values corresponding with greater levels of physical function and lower disability, whereas lower point values correspond with lower levels of physical function and higher disability, respectively.
Motricity Index (MI)
MI can be used to assess the motor impairment in a patient who has had a stroke.
Test for each upper limb:
pincer grip
elbow flexion
shoulder abduction
Test for each lower limb:
ankle dorsiflexion
knee extension
hip flexion
For the pincer grip:
0 points, no movement 19 points, grip possible but not against gravity 33 points, normal grip
For all other items:
0 points, no movement 14 points, Visible movement but not for the entire joint range or against gravity 19 points, movement possible for the entire joint range against gravity but not against resistance 33 points movement performed with normal force
Each segment has a total score obtained by adding the value "1" to the score of each individual item. The total score then ranges from 1 (no movement) to 100 (normal movement).
Timed Up and Go Test (TUG)
TUG measures in seconds the time it takes a subject to rise from a chair, walk a distance of 3 meters, turn, walk back to the chair and sit down.
The performance is rated on a scale of 1 to 5 (where 1 is normal and 5 is severely abnormal) according to the observer's perception of the patient's risk of falling.
The timed part of the test records the mean time (in seconds) from initial getting up to re-seating. Patients are compared with the mean time of adults in their age group, 60 to 69, 70 to 79, and 80 to 99 years of age.
HandGrip Test (HGT)
HGT is a test performed with a dynamometer, which goes to assess muscle strength (in kilograms). Starting with the elbow flexed to 90°, the patient must squeeze the dynamometer as hard as they can at one time. Three repeated measurements are taken on each side 20 seconds apart.
The average of the three assessments is used as the final value.
Ambulation Index (AI)
AI is a rating scale to assess mobility by evaluating the time and degree of assistance required to walk 8 meters. Scores range from 0 (asymptomatic and fully active) to 10 (bedridden). The patient is asked to walk a marked 8 meters course as quickly and safely as possible. The examiner records the time and type of assistance (e.g., cane, walker, crutches) needed. Although the patient's walking is timed, the time is not used directly but is utilized in conjunction with other factors to rate the patient on an ordinal scale with 11 gradations.
0 = Asymptomatic; fully active. 10 = Bedridden
Walking handicap scale (WHS)
WHS is an assessment tool that allows us to evaluate the quality of walking in the home and social environment through a a scale comprising six categories.
1 = Physiological walking: walking only as exercise 6 = Unrestricted walking in social settings: independent in all activities, on uneven ground, in crowded places, shows complete independence in public places.
Functional Ambulation Classification (FAC)
FAC is a functional walking test that evaluates ambulation ability. This 6-point scale assesses ambulation status by determining how much human support the patient requires when walking, regardless of whether or not they use a personal assistive device.
To use the FAC, an assessor asks the subject various questions and briefly observes their walking ability to provide a rating from 0 to 5.
A score of 0 indicates that the patient is a non-functional ambulator (cannot walk); A score of 1, 2 or 3 denotes a dependent ambulator who requires assistance from another person in the form of continuous manual contact (1), continuous or intermittent manual contact (2), or verbal supervision/guarding (3).
A score of 4 or 5 describes an independent ambulator who can walk freely on: level surfaces only (4) or any surface (5=maximum score).
10 Meter Walk Test (10mWT)
The 10mWT is used to assess walking speed in meters/second (m/s) over a short distance. The total time taken to ambulate 6 meters (m) is recorded to the nearest hundredth of a second. 6 m is then divided by the total time (in seconds) taken to ambulate and recorded in m/s.
The time is measured for the middle 6 m to allow for patient acceleration and deceleration.
The time is started when any part of the leading foot crosses the plane of the 2-m mark.
The time is stopped when any part of the leading foot crosses the plane of the 8-m mark.1 The time to walk the middle 6m, the level of assistance, and type of assistive device and/or bracing used will be documented.
If a patient requires total assistance or is unable to ambulate at all, a score of 0 m/s will be documented.
Six-minute walk test (6MWT)
The 6MWT is a sub-maximal exercise test used to assess walking endurance and aerobic capacity. Participants will walk around the perimeter of a set circuit for a total of six minutes. The score of the test is the distance a patient walks in 6 minutes (measured in meters and can round to the nearest decimal point).
Distance (in meters) covered in six minutes is calculated by multiplying the number of total laps by 12 meters and adding the distance of the partial lap completed at the time the test ended.
modified Barthel Index (mBI)
mBI for activities of daily living is meant to be used in the assessment of patient performance (or degree of assistance required) with respect to self-care, sphincter management, transfers and locomotion. The index consist of 10 items (each scored with a number of points) that relate to activities of daily living (ADLs) where the final score is calculated by summing the points awarded to each item. A five-point rating scales for each item to improve sensitivity to detecting change.
The 10 items assessed relate to:
Help needed with feeding;
Help needed with bathing;
Help needed with grooming;
Help needed with dressing;
Presence or absence of fecal incontinence;
Presence or absence of urinary incontinence;
Help needed with transfers;
Help needed with walking;
Help needed with climbing stairs.
Interpretation:
91-100 Slight dependency
61-90 Moderate dependency
21-60 Severe dependency
0-20 Total dependency
EuroQol- 5 Dimension (EQ-5D)
EQ-5D is an instrument which evaluates the generic quality of life. The EQ-5D descriptive system is a preference-based HRQL measure with one question for each of the five dimensions that include mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort, and anxiety/depression. The answers given to ED-5D permit to find 243 unique health states or can be converted into EQ- 5D index an utility scores anchored at 0 for death and 1 for perfect health.
Frontal Assessment Battery (FAB)
The FAB is a brief tool that can be used at the bedside or in a clinic setting to assist in discriminating between dementias with a frontal dysexecutive phenotype and Dementia of Alzheimer"s Type (DAT).
The FAB has validity in distinguishing Fronto-temporal type dementia from DAT in mildly demented patients (MMSE > 24). Total score is from a maximum of 18, higher scores indicating better performance.
Stroop Colour Word Test (SCWT)
The SCWT is a neuropsychological test extensively used to assess the ability to inhibit cognitive interference that occurs when the processing of a specific stimulus feature impedes the simultaneous processing of a second stimulus attribute, well-known as the Stroop Effect. The subject is asked to read the words in the first task, to name colors in the second and third tasks. It is necessary to mark both any mistakes made but also the time spent on each task. The cut-off for the error interference effect is 4.24, while the cut-off for the time interference effect is 36.92.
Digit Cancellation Test (DCT)
In the DCT the patient is asked to cross out with a pencil, as quickly as possible, all numbers corresponding to those indicated at the top of each matrix. Line A serves as an example. The performance of the subject is counted from line I. Corrections of the barriers are not allowed. The task of the examiner is mark the point at which the subject has exceeded the maximum time of the test, but let the subject let the subject finish his task for each matrix. The maximum time for each matrix is 45 sec- and is considered from the moment the subject finishes the run in. If the subject takes less time than the maximum time, it will be indicated at the end of each matrix. The time cut-off for the test is 23.9.
Trial Making Test (TMT)
The TMT measures flexibility of thinking on a visual-motor sequencing task. It consists of two parts, A and B, where 25 circles distributed over a sheet of paper. In Part A, the circles are numbered 1 - 25, and the patient should draw lines to connect the numbers in ascending order. In Part B, the circles include both numbers (1 - 13) and letters (A - L); as in Part A, the patient draws lines to connect the circles in an ascending pattern, but with the added task of alternating between the numbers and letters (i.e., 1-A-2-B-3-C, etc.).
Results for both TMT A and B are reported as the number of seconds required to complete the task; therefore, higher scores reveal greater impairment.
Trail A: Average 29 seconds, Deficient > 78 seconds, Rule of Thumb Most in 90 seconds Trail B: Average 75 seconds, Deficient > 273 seconds, Rule of Thumb Most in 3 minutes
Dual-Energy X-ray Absorptiometry (DEXA)
DEXA is an instrumental examination based on the principle of differential attenuation of an X-ray beam, at two energy levels, as it passes through tissues. This attenuation is recordable and correlated with the body composition of the subject being examined.
The device uses a coincident X-ray beam with no scattering in the environment. The radiation dose per single examination is minimal (1 mRem). There is therefore no risk to both patient and operator, and it is possible to repeat the examination at short intervals.
DEXA allows for:
a weight and percentage assessment of lean mass and fat mass in different body districts. It is therefore possible to determine the areas of fat accumulation and quantify their weight in grams.
a selective assessment in the different body districts of the state of bone mineralization.
The examination has a total duration of 30 minutes.