Abstract

AbstractBackgroundWhile single assessment of postural sway or saccadic eye movements is potentially useful for dementia screening at clinical settings [1, 2], multimodal assessment of the two movements could improve the screening accuracy [3‐5]. We have developed a novel comprehensive assessment system of posture and saccades, with integrated additional cognitive tasks of visuospatial memory and spatial orientation. We hypothesised that the new system would improve the classification of mild cognitive impairment (MCI).Method23 older adults joined the experiment and were split into two group based on the score of Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) [6]: 20 healthy older adults (HA) (70.35±4.93 years, 11 men / 9 women) and 3 older adults with MCI (74.7±4.04 years, 1 man / 2 women). The assessment system consists of stabilometer (GP‐5000, ANIMA Corporation, Japan) and a head‐mounted display virtual reality (VR) technology (VIVE Pro Eye, HTC Corporation, Taiwan). We measured postural sway and pro‐ or anti‐saccadic eye movements simultaneously in each of three different VR environments: #1) no additional cognitive task, #2) with visuospatial memory task, and #3) with spatial orientation task. We compared the parameters of saccades and postural sway between HA and MCI groups.ResultHA group achieved the MoCA score of 27.2±1.64, while MCI group scored 20.3±2.08 (P=0.006). Our analysis did not find significant differences between the two groups in all parameters. However, we observed moderate effect on standard deviation of centre of pressure in medio‐lateral direction in two test conditions: 1) the condition with pro‐saccade and visuospatial memory tasks (P=0.14; effect size = 0.32) and 2) the condition with anti‐saccade and spatial orientation tasks (P=0.09; effect size = 0.36).ConclusionModerate effect was observed on postural sway behaviours in the two test conditions. Since these conditions theoretically activate wider areas of the brain, our comprehensive assessment approach could be useful for dementia screening. Future research requires more sample size of MCI population for further analysis.

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