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Journal Article

Citation

Aslaksen PM, Orbo M, Elvestad R, Schäfer C, Anke A. Eur. J. Neurol. 2013; 20(9): 1227-1233.

Affiliation

Department of Rehabilitation, University Hospital North Norway, Tromsø, Norway; Department of Psychology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Tromsø, Tromsø, Norway.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, European Federation of Neurological Societies, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/ene.12172

PMID

23560568

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The aim of the study was to examine the predictive value of widely used standardized neuropsychological tests in a clinical setting for on-road driving performance in patients with cerebral stroke or traumatic brain injury (TBI), and to provide cut-off values for neuropsychological test results under which driving should not be recommended. METHODS: Data from 78 patients who had undergone comprehensive driving assessment after stroke or TBI were retrospectively included in the analysis. Patients underwent medical examination, neuropsychological testing and on-road assessment. Medical data, demographic variables and neuropsychological performance were used as predictors in a stepwise logistic regression analysis with pass/fail after the on-road test as the dependent variable. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis was employed to select cut-off values for the tests that were significant predictors for on-road performance. RESULTS: Forty-three patients passed and 35 failed the on-road driving task. Logistic regression analysis revealed three significant neuropsychological tests (CalCap simple reaction time, Trail Making Test A, Grooved Pegboard) as predictors for on-road performance explaining 46% of the variance with an overall classification accuracy of 82.1%. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis showed the following cut-off values: CalCap, 395 ms; Trail Making Test A, 46 s; Grooved Pegboard, 97.5 s. CONCLUSION: The results suggest that driving ability after brain damage and cerebral disease with no severe neurological deficits can be measured with a few distinctive neuropsychological tests together with medical examination and on-road assessment. Cut-off scores are a useful supplement to normative data/scaled scores.


Language: en

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