Early experience with HEADS: Hepatic Encephalopathy Assessment Driving Simulator.

Author(s)
Nyberg, S.L. Baskin-Bey, E.S. Mitchell, M.M. Bida, J.P. Schneider, N.K. Smith, G.E. Rosenthal, T.J. & Stewart, C.A.
Year
Abstract

Very little is known about the use of simulated driving to assess neurological impairment in the setting of liver disease. The specific aim this pilot study was to determine if a computerized driving routine could identify individuals judged to be impaired by neuropsychological testing from a population of cirrhotic patients awaiting liver transplantation. Driving performance of cirrhotic patients awaiting liver healthy volunteers (n=31) was compared in a preliminary evaluation of theatients also underwent six cognitive domains (attention, learning, emory, motor, processing speed, visual); impairment of each domain was defined by a Z-score < -1. Thirteen of fifteen cirrhotics were classified as impaired in at least one cognitive domain based on neuropsychological testing. Driving performance of impaired cirrhotics differed significantly from the cohort of non-impaired plus healthy subjects (n=33). Several driving variables showed a strong correlation with impairment of at least one cognitive domain. In contrast, driving performance could not be predicted from MELD score in this population of cirrhotic patients. A computer-simulated driving system such as HEADS may prove useful as a simple and practical means to assess cognitive impairment from liver disease. Further validation is indicated in a larger study population of cirrhotic patients.(Author/publisher).

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Publication

Library number
I E135089 /80 /83 / ITRD E135089
Source

Advances In Transportation Studies. 2006. (Special Issue) Pp53-62 (14 Refs.)

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.