Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Introduction of automated systems to evaluate touch‐pressure, vibration, and thermal cutaneous sensation in man

205

Citations

7

References

1978

Year

TLDR

These systems may be used to detect and validate sensory abnormalities in neurological disease, in individuals at risk from new medications or industrial toxins, and to monitor changes in sensation during follow‑up or therapeutic evaluation. The systems use quantified, reproducible stimuli, a two‑alternative forced‑choice technique, and programmed steps to test, score, and report, defining abnormal responses as those exceeding the 95th percentile of healthy controls. Systems for automatic assessment of cutaneous touch‑pressure, vibratory, and thermal sensation have been developed and can detect and validate sensory abnormalities in neurological disease, in individuals at risk from new medications or industrial toxins, and monitor changes in sensation during follow‑up or therapeutic evaluation.

Abstract

Abstract Systems for automatic assessment of cutaneous touch‐pressure, vibratory, and thermal sensation have been developed. These systems use stimuli which are quantified and reproductible, a two‐alternative forced‐choice technique, and programmed steps to test, score, and report. If normal responses from series of healthy persons have been measured, percentile values specific for test, site, age, and sex can be determined. Abnormality, as in neurological disease, can then be defined as the response which has a value greater than that of the 95th (or other) percentile. These systems may be used to detect and validate abnormalities of sensation in neurological disease and in persons at risk from new medications or from industrial toxins, and to monitor worsening or improvement of sensation in follow‐up of a patient or in evaluation of therapeutic regimens.

References

YearCitations

Page 1