Background: There are no widely accepted criteria to aid the physician in diagnosing BSP. Objective: To validate recently proposed diagnostic criteria for blepharospasm in a larger and geographically diverse population and to develop a screening system for blepharospasm. Methods: Video-recordings from 211 blepharospasm patients and 166 healthy/disease controls were examined by 8 raters. Agreement for presence of orbicularis oculi spasms, sensory trick, and increased blinking was measured by k statistics. Inability to voluntarily suppress the spasms was asked by the examiner but not captured in the video. Patients/controls were also requested to fill a self-administered questionnaire addressing relevant blepharospasm clinical aspects. The diagnosis at each site was the gold standard for sensitivity/specificity. Results: All the study items yielded satisfactory inter/intra-observer agreement. Combination of items rather than each item alone reached satisfactory sensitivity/specificity. The combined algorithm started with recognition of spasms followed by sensory trick. In the absence of a sensory trick, including “increased blinking” or “inability to voluntarily suppress the spasms” or both items yielded 88–92% sensitivity and 79–83% specificity. No single question of the questionnaire yielded high sensitivity/specificity. Serial application of the questionnaire to our blepharospasm and control subjects and subsequent clinical examination of subjects screening positive by the validated diagnostic algorithms yielded 78–81% sensitivity and 83–91% specificity. Conclusion: These results support the use of proposed diagnostic criteria in multi-ethnic, multi-center cohorts. We also propose a case-finding procedure to screen blepharospasm in a given population with less effort than would be required by examination of all subjects.

Diagnostic criteria for blepharospasm: A multicenter international study / Defazio, G.; Jinnah, H. A.; Berardelli, A.; Perlmutter, J. S.; Berkmen, G. K.; Berman, B. D.; Jankovic, J.; Baumer, T.; Comella, C.; Cotton, A. C.; Ercoli, T.; Ferrazzano, G.; Fox, S.; Kim, H. -J.; Moukheiber, E. S.; Richardson, S. P.; Weissbach, A.; Wrigth, L. J.; Hallett, M.. - In: PARKINSONISM & RELATED DISORDERS. - ISSN 1353-8020. - 91:(2021), pp. 109-114. [10.1016/j.parkreldis.2021.09.004]

Diagnostic criteria for blepharospasm: A multicenter international study

Berardelli A.;Ercoli T.;Ferrazzano G.;
2021

Abstract

Background: There are no widely accepted criteria to aid the physician in diagnosing BSP. Objective: To validate recently proposed diagnostic criteria for blepharospasm in a larger and geographically diverse population and to develop a screening system for blepharospasm. Methods: Video-recordings from 211 blepharospasm patients and 166 healthy/disease controls were examined by 8 raters. Agreement for presence of orbicularis oculi spasms, sensory trick, and increased blinking was measured by k statistics. Inability to voluntarily suppress the spasms was asked by the examiner but not captured in the video. Patients/controls were also requested to fill a self-administered questionnaire addressing relevant blepharospasm clinical aspects. The diagnosis at each site was the gold standard for sensitivity/specificity. Results: All the study items yielded satisfactory inter/intra-observer agreement. Combination of items rather than each item alone reached satisfactory sensitivity/specificity. The combined algorithm started with recognition of spasms followed by sensory trick. In the absence of a sensory trick, including “increased blinking” or “inability to voluntarily suppress the spasms” or both items yielded 88–92% sensitivity and 79–83% specificity. No single question of the questionnaire yielded high sensitivity/specificity. Serial application of the questionnaire to our blepharospasm and control subjects and subsequent clinical examination of subjects screening positive by the validated diagnostic algorithms yielded 78–81% sensitivity and 83–91% specificity. Conclusion: These results support the use of proposed diagnostic criteria in multi-ethnic, multi-center cohorts. We also propose a case-finding procedure to screen blepharospasm in a given population with less effort than would be required by examination of all subjects.
2021
Blepharospasm; Diagnosis; Dystonia
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Diagnostic criteria for blepharospasm: A multicenter international study / Defazio, G.; Jinnah, H. A.; Berardelli, A.; Perlmutter, J. S.; Berkmen, G. K.; Berman, B. D.; Jankovic, J.; Baumer, T.; Comella, C.; Cotton, A. C.; Ercoli, T.; Ferrazzano, G.; Fox, S.; Kim, H. -J.; Moukheiber, E. S.; Richardson, S. P.; Weissbach, A.; Wrigth, L. J.; Hallett, M.. - In: PARKINSONISM & RELATED DISORDERS. - ISSN 1353-8020. - 91:(2021), pp. 109-114. [10.1016/j.parkreldis.2021.09.004]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1579382
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