Title: | Reproducibility and validity of patient-rated assessment of speech, swallowing, and saliva control in Parkinson’s Disease |
Author(s): | Zwarts, Machiel ; Kalf, Johanna ; Bloem, Bastiaan ; Borm, George ; Munneke, Marten ; Swart, B.J.M. de |
Publication year: | 2012 |
Source: | Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, vol. 2011, iss. 92, (2012), pp. 1152-1158 |
ISSN: | 0003-9993 |
DOI: | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apmr.2011.02.011 |
Publication type: | Article / Letter to editor |
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item : https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12470/262 ![]() |
|
Display more details |
|
Lectorate : | Neurorevalidatie |
Journal title : | Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation |
Volume : | vol. 2011 |
Issue : | iss. 92 |
Page start : | p.1152 |
Page end : | p.1158 |
Abstract: |
To report on the development and psychometric evaluation of the Radboud Oral Motor Inventory for Parkinsons Disease (ROMP), a newly developed patient-rated assessment of speech, swallowing, and saliva control in patients with Parkinsons disease (PD). To evaluate reproducibility, 60 patients completed the ROMP twice within a mean of 24±12 days. To study validity, another cohort of 118 patients who had completed the ROMP was assessed by both a neurologist (HY stage, Unified Parkinsons Disease Rating Scale III) and speech-language pathologist (severity of dysarthria, dysphagia, drooling) who were blinded to ROMP scores. Confirmatory factor analysis identified the 3 a priori-designed ROMP domains of speech, swallowing, and saliva control. Internal consistency was .95 for the total ROMP and .87 to .94 for the 3 domains or subscales. Intraclass correlation coefficients for reproducibility were .94 and .83 to .92 for the subscales. Construct validity was substantial to good with correlations ranging from .36 to .82. The ROMP differentiated significantly (P<.001) between patients indicated for speech therapy (based on independent assessment) and those who were not and between mild, moderate, and severe PD according to HY stage. The ROMP provides a reliable and valid instrument to evaluate patient-perceived problems with speech, swallowing, and saliva control in patients with PD or AP.
|