Validation of a French version of the upper limb Erasmus Modified Nottingham Sensory Assessment with stereognosis (EmNSA-S) component in patients with stroke

2017 
Objective Sensory impairment of the upper limb (UL) is a common deficit post-stroke, associated with loss of functional ability. Currently, there is no standardized tool evaluating sensation of the UL in patients with stroke in the French language. The objective was to develop a French version of the Erasmus modified Nottingham Sensory Assessment with stereognosis component (EmNSA-S) for evaluation of the UL among adults with stroke. Material/patients and methods It was a monocentric prospective observational cross-sectional design study. The study consisted of two phases including (i) instrument translation, and (ii) validation phase with establishment of the concurrent criterion-related validity, internal consistency, intra and inter-rater reliability and minimal detectable change with 95% confidence interval (MDC95). French version of the EmNSA-S for UL was developed through multidisciplinary forwards-backwards translation. Outcome measures were the EmNSA-S, Fugl-Meyer Assessment sensory subscale (FMA-S) and the Fugl-Meyer Assessment motor subscale of UE (FMA-M UE). Fifty patients with hemiparesis due to a single cerebrovascular accident were recruited to establish psychometric properties (mean ± SD age, 55 ± 15.6 years; median [range] time since stroke, 3.1 [1.1 to 319.1] months; 70% of male; 52% right paresis; median [range] FMA-M UE scale, 33.5/66 [4 to 66]). Results The median [range] score of EmNSA-S was 51.5/64 [1 to 63], a score of 64 indicating no sensory impairment. Spearman rank correlation coefficient was very strong between EmNSA-S and FMA-S total scores ( r  = 0.826, P Discussion – conclusion The standardized French version of the EmNSA-S provides a valid and reliable scale. The study supports the use of the French version of this scale for comprehensive and accurate assessment of sensory modalities in adults post-stroke.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []