Validity and reliability of the Ocular Motor Nerve Palsy Scale

Neural Regen Res. 2018 Oct;13(10):1851-1856. doi: 10.4103/1673-5374.238716.

Abstract

Objective and accurate assessment of the degree of ocular motor nerve palsy is helpful not only in the evaluation of prognosis, but also for the screening of treatment methods. However, there is currently no comprehensive measure of its severity. In this study, we designed the Ocular Motor Nerve Palsy Scale and investigated its validity and reliability. Six experts were invited to grade and evaluate the scale. The study recruited 106 patients with a definite diagnosis of unilateral isolated ocular motor nerve palsy. Three physicians evaluated the patients using the scale. One of the three physicians evaluated the patients again after 24 hours. The content validity index (CVI) and factor analysis were used to analyze the scale's construct validity. The intraclass correlation coefficient and Cronbach's alpha were used to evaluate the inter-rater and test-retest reliability and the internal consistency. The CVI results (I-CVI = 1.0, S-CVI = 0.9, P = 0.016, K* = 1) indicated good content validity. Factor analysis extracted two common factors that accounted for 85.2% of the variance. Furthermore, the load value of each component was above 0.8, indicating good construct validity. The Ocular Motor Nerve Palsy Scale was found to be highly reliable, with an inter-rater reliability intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.965 (P < 0.01), a test-retest reliability intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.976 (P < 0.01), and Cronbach's alpha values of 0.63-0.70. In conclusion, the Ocular Motor Nerve Palsy Scale with good validity and reliability can be used to quantify the severity of ocular motor nerve palsy. This study was registered at Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (registration number: ChiCTR-OOC-17010702).

Keywords: Ocular Motor Nerve Palsy Scale; abducens nerve paralysis; diplopia; eyeball movement disorder; internal consistency; nerve regeneration; neural regeneration; oculomotor nerve paralysis; ptosis; reliability; trochlear nerve paralysis; validity.