Content area

Abstract

Background of the problem

Children with Cerebral Palsy and Hemiplegia or Spastic Diplegia have a very high incidence of visual and visual perceptive problems (Ego et al., 2015, Fazzi et al., 2012; Poggi et al., 2000). Children with these diagnoses who are ambulatory often have problems of postural control and balance. Multiple body systems influence balance abilities. Oculomotor and visual perceptive characteristics have not been studied clinically in conjunction with multidimensional balance testing as found on the Kids BESTest (Dewar et al., 2019; Dewar, et al., 2021b).

Methods

The primary purpose of the research was to describe the oculomotor and visual perceptual skills in children with ambulatory CP compared to typically developing children and the relationship of these constructs with balance. The study design was an observational cohort design. Testing occurred for the following measures: NSUCO test of pursuits and saccades (Maples & Ficklin, 1988) , Subjective Visual Vertical (Zwergal et al., 2009) , MVPT-4 (Tsai, Lin, Liao, & Hsieh, 2018) , Kids BESTest Verticality and Stability Limits, and the Kids Mini BESTest (Dewar et al., 2019; Dewar, et al., 2021b). Similarities and differences between children with hemiplegic and spastic diplegic CP for these characteristics were also documented. The data was expected to be variable due to the nature of the diagnosis of cerebral palsy and a relatively small sample size. When normality criteria were not met, nonparametric analyses were utilized.

Results

Children with CP with hemiplegia or spastic diplegia had lower scores than typically developing children for oculomotor, visual perceptual and balance testing. The sample size was not sufficient to determine a difference between the CP types for these tests. Additionally, a Spearman Correlation was performed to analyze the relationship between oculomotor and visual perception scores with balance scores for the full sample with CP, as well as between children with hemiplegia and spastic diplegia.

Children with hemiplegic CP had a moderate positive direct relationship between scores on the balance tests for both pursuits and saccades. Children with spastic diplegia had a moderate relationship with accuracy of eye movement with pursuits and scores on the two balance tests.

Conclusions

These preliminary findings suggest that addressing balance deficits might be personalized by adding oculomotor and visual perception assessments, as well as interventions to complement balance training.

Details

1010268
Title
Characteristics and the Relationship of Oculomotor Control, Visual Perception and Balance Abilities in Children With Cerebral Palsy
Author
Number of pages
172
Publication year
2025
Degree date
2025
School code
1995
Source
DAI-B 86/10(E), Dissertation Abstracts International
ISBN
9798314809662
Committee member
Parrott, Scott J.
University/institution
Rutgers The State University of New Jersey, Rutgers School of Health Professions
Department
Health Sciences
University location
United States -- New Jersey
Degree
Ph.D.
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language
English
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
31935391
ProQuest document ID
3196023580
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/dissertations-theses/characteristics-relationship-oculomotor-control/docview/3196023580/se-2?accountid=208611
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.
Database
ProQuest One Academic