Title: Introduction to OT 689
1Introduction to OT 689
- Foundations in Evaluation and Treatment of Visual
Impairment from Brain Injury
2Instructors Information
- Email address warrenm_at_uab.edu
- Phone number 934-1800
- Office Hours by appointment
- Office 340
3Class Materials
- biVABA Test Manual
- Copy of chapter 24 in 2001 Pedretti
- Copy of assessment forms for biVABA
- Penlight
- 1 inch craft sticks (2)
- Eye patch
- Each person needs a have a partner with whom they
will practice evaluations and take the practical
exam
4Lectures/Reading Materials
- PPP will be posted in WebCT at least one day
before the class - Copies of Pedretti Chapter, required readings and
evaluation forms will be in the resources file in
WebCT - Information will be addressed on tests
5Case Applications
- 4 case applications will be completed on a pt
with visual impairment from brain injury - Topic
- acuity deficits
- oculomotor impairment
- visual field deficit
- visual inattention
- Will be completed in two parts, submitted
sequentially - Part 1, test through webCT part 2 tx application
- Each worth 50 points
- Occulsion exercise-50 points
6Class Assignments
- Must be type written and submitted in the
required format - .5 deduction for all mis-spellings, grammatical
errors - 10 point deduction for turning in a late
assignment
7Student Evaluation
- Four written exams 60
- Short answer, multiple choice
- Will include required readings
- Two application exams 20
- Demonstrate correct test procedure
- Demonstrate understanding of test mechanics
- Demonstrate understanding of test modifications
- In class assignments and 20
- case applications
8Tentative Test Dates
- Test One January 27th
- Application Test February 17th
- Test Two February 24th
- Test Three March 16th
- Application Test April 13th
- Test Four April 20th
9Absences
- Notify me by phone or email if you will need to
miss a class. Because this class relies on class
lecture and demonstration with little outside
reading, attendance is very important. - One excused absence is allowed
- Additional absences result in 15 pt deduction
from test grade - No class on March 23rd (spring break)
- In the case of bad weather (ice, snow) class will
be cancelled-( I will send an email out to the
class via WebCT) although the information you
will be taught is very important it doesnt
warrant risking life, limb and car.
10Communication
- I will send written communications to you either
through webCt or by sending a mass email through
the class distribution system at UAB - If your current email address differs from the
the email address in the electronic address book
for UAB you will not receive these emails - Its your responsibility to update the directory
11The Adaptation Process
12Lecture Objectives
- Understands the role of vision in occupational
performance and adaptation - Able to apply the concept of the visual
perceptual hierarchy as a framework for
evaluation and treatment - Able to describe the purpose of occupational
therapy evaluation - Able to describe the general approach to
treatment intervention
13- The overall function of the brain is to filter,
organize and integrate sensory information to
make an adaptive response to the environment. - Jean Ayres
14Adaptation is built on theintegration of sensory
information
- We are sensory-motor-sensory beings
- Sensory input triggers motor response that
produces new sensory input that modifies the
motor response and so on. - The trigger is awareness of the incoming sensory
input - If you dont see the ball coming at you, you
dont make an attempt to catch it
15Adaptation is Context Dependent
- Incoming sensory information creates the context
- Bits and pieces of sensory information are
integrated to create a complete and continuously
updated picture of the environment which is then
used to make decisions, formulate plans etc. - The context of the situation determines the
response
16Adaptation is Dependent on Anticipation
- Anticipation allows person to plan for an
upcoming situation which in turn increases
chances of successfully handling the event - Anticipation is driven by sensory context
- It looks like rain.Id better take an umbrella
- For anticipation and planning to occur, incoming
sensory input must be of sufficient quantity and
quality to build an accurate complete context - When incoming sensory input is altered by
disease, trauma, age etc, ability to adapt lessens
17Role of Vision in the Adaptation Process
18Vision is our most far reaching sensory system
- First to alert to danger or pleasure
- Enables us to be anticipatory
- Provides early warning of what is about to happen
- And plan for situations
- Have time to plan how to respond
19Vision can instantly convey an immense amount of
information
- The power of television is that is conveys a
tremendous amount of information within seconds - World trade towers
- JFK assassination
- Challenger explosion
- You can instantly identify an object with vision,
you can also identify objects using your other
senses but it will take longer
20Speed supplied by vision is critical to
adaptation to dynamic environments
- Operate in two types of environments
- Static
- Dynamic
- Static
- Nothing moves but the person
- Spatial adaptation is required but not temporal
adaptation - Person decides when to start and stop movement
- Vision is nice to have but not critical to
performance
21- Dynamic environments
- Objects are in motion independent of the person
- Requires both spatial and temporal adaptation
- Timing is critical
- Only vision provides sufficient advanced warning
to coordinate body movement with movement of
other objects
22Vision is the primary sensory system used to
acquire information about the environment
- 80-90 of all learning occurs through the visual
channel - 90 of all sensory information supplied to the
CNS is visual
23Vision plays a powerful role in learning and
decision making
- Supplies information needed for cognitive
functions of problem solving and decision making - Supplies information needed to interpret social
interactions - 90 of social communication is non verbal, cued
by vision - You see someone and you smile at them
- Supplies input for motor and postural control
- Impetus for movement
- See the diet coke, go get the diet coke
- Warns of upcoming challenges to postural control
- Gives us 100 feet of planning time before we
encounter an obstacle
24Dominance of Vision
- Vision has been such a reliable, fast, precise
source of input that over the years we have built
our culture around visual input - Primary way we acquire information
- Newspapers
- Labels
- Instructions
- Telephones
- Watches
- Computers
25Dominance of Vision
- Dominates recreational activities
- Sewing
- Handcrafts
- Sports
- Movies, television, plays
- Card games
- Provides us with the ability to participate in
dynamic unpredictable activities - 1 - driving
26Visual Impairment
- Can occur secondary to
- Disease/conditions
- Acquired or congenital
- Trauma
- Stroke, traumatic brain injury, brain tumor,
infection - Age
- Impairment begins in 40s becomes significant in
90s - Often occurs due to a combination
- Example stroke causing hemianopsia in a patient
who already has diabetic retinopathy
27When visual impairment occurs
- Can alter the quality and amount of visual input
into the brain - Or alter the way the brain is able to process
normal visual input - Or both
- Regardless
- Results in a decrease in the ability to use
vision for occupational performance
28Visual impairment
- Will observe changes in the performances
dependent on vision - Driving or reading for example
- Observe a decrease in the speed of information
processing - Reduced reaction time, slowed response
- Observe changes in decision making
- Errors occur because person doesnt get enough
information or faulty information
29 Resulting changes in behavior
- Frequently observe
- Anxiousness and uncertainty in responding to the
environment - Decreased confidence in ability to compete
activities - Increased passiveness in decision making
- Can affect persons performance in a variety of
daily activities
30In general
- Persons will have the most difficulty completing
activities that must be done in dynamic
environments - Daily activities affected the most are those that
occur in the community - Driving
- Shopping
- Working
- Participating in sports
31Biggest Challenge
- One of greatest concerns among persons working in
the field - Person with visual impairment will refrain from
engaging in activities in community and dynamic
environments - Not only eliminates very enjoyable activities but
prolongs the adjustment to disability
32Neurological Framework for Evaluation and
Treatment
33Visual Perception
- Integration of visual input within CNS to turn
the raw data supplied by the retina into
cognitive concepts of the perception of objects
and space that can be manipulated and used for
decision making
34Visual Perceptual Hierarchy
- Visual perceptual function can be conceptualized
as being organized into a hierarchy of processes
that interact and sub-serve each other to
provide integration of visual information
35Processes comprising visual perceptual processing
- Visual cognition
- Visual memory
- Pattern recognition
- Visual search and scanning
- Visual attention
- Oculomotor control
- Visual field
- Visual acuity
36Visual Cognition
- Apply cognitive concepts of space and form
developed through vision to decision making and
problem solving - Size constancy as an example
- Forms basis of all academics
- Ability to read and complete mathematics
- Foundation for many vocations
- Surgeons, architects, engineers
- Cannot alter vision without altering cognition
37Visual Memory
- Supports visuo-cognition
- To understand and mentally manipulate visual
input you must have visual memories of objects to
compare and contrast
38Example Visual Memory
Can you see the silhouette of both the hawk and
the goose ?
To see either requires recall of the silhouette
of the bird from visual memory
39Pattern Recognition
- Whether a memory is initially laid down and how
accurate and useful the memory is depends on
pattern recognition - Pattern recognition requires identification of
salient features of objects - A salient feature is one that distinguishes the
object and defines it as what it is
40Example Pattern Recognition
What feature distinguishes the E from the F? A
the lower horizontal bar
41Pattern Recognition is Comprised of Two Abilities
- Ability to see the pattern holistically as a
single entity or gestalt - See the forest
- Ability to go into the pattern and see the
details - See the trees
42Example
- Viewed as a single gestalt
- The observer sees a tree in winter
- When the details of the
- illustration are viewed
- The observer becomes
- aware that the tree is actually a bird with
a bird perched within its branches
43 Visual Search and Scanning
- Sub-serves pattern recognition
- To see gestalt and detail requires thorough
scanning/search of the visual array - Occurs on two levels
- Automatic reflexive
- Mediated through brainstem for survival
- Automatically turn head toward appearance of any
light/object moving into the periphery - Voluntary purposeful
- Mediated through the cortex driven by cognition
- Purposefully scan a visual array in order to
locate and identify a target
44 Visual Search and Scanning
- Completed in an organized efficient and
predictable pattern - Prevalent scanning pattern
- Left to right
- Top to bottom
- Linear pattern is used to view a structured array
- Example searching for a friend sitting on
bleachers at a game - Circular pattern is used to view a non structured
array - Example searching a landscape
45Reading Left to right top to bottom
search strategy
Landscape Left to right, circular search strategy
46Visual Attention
- Sub-serves visual search/scanning
- Visual search is an expression of visual
attention - Critical component for complex visual processing
- Attention to a target determines the level of
assimilation - Varies from global to focal depending on type of
visual analysis needed - Global attention is required for awareness that
there is a chair in a room - Focal attention is needed to identify the type of
chair
47Visual Attention
- Simultaneously employ at least 2 types of visual
attention at all times - Global awareness of objects in environment so one
can navigate the environment - Focal attention to the target so it can be
identified - Example locating a friend in a crowd and walking
towards him - Requires global attention to negotiate the crowd
and focal attention to be sure that your friend
doesnt move off before you reach him
48Visual Attention
- Requires all of CNS to complete visual attention
- Structures in the brainstem, cerebral cortex and
cerebellum are all involved
49Foundation Functions
- Three visual functions form the foundation for
all higher level visual perceptual processing - Oculomotor control
- Provides perceptual stability
- Visual acuity
- Provides visual clarity-ability to see details
- Visual field
- Provides awareness of objects
- Without these visual functions no image would be
generated within the CNS
50 All levels must work together
- Like parts of a car, loss or impairment of one
level affects the functioning of all other levels - Especially if a lower level function has been
impaired
51Example
- Patient with a left homonymous hemianopsia is
blind in the left half of each eye - Because of the blindness, the brain does not
register objects on the left side - Because brain does not register objects on the
left, visual attention is not engaged towards the
left - Because visual attention is not engaged towards
the left, pattern recognition is not completed
for objects on the left side
52Example continued
- Because pattern recognition is not completed,
visual memory of the visual array on the left is
not laid down - Because visual memory is not laid down, the
patient displays topographical disorientation, a
cognitive inability to map out and navigate space
53Changes in Visual PerceptionFollowing Brain
Injury
- Occur primarily as result of changes in 4 areas
of visual function - Visual field
- Visual acuity/focusing
- Oculomotor control
- Visual attention
- Impairment in each area runs along a continuum
from mild to severe - Persons ability to adapt depends on severity of
the impairment and persons other strengths and
weaknesses
54Challenges Addressing Visual Impairment from
Brain Injury
55Challenges
- Disability picture is very complex
- Many factors contribute to persons inability to
complete daily activities - Motor
- Language
- Cognitive
- Visual
- Psychological
56Challenges
- Patient often presents ambiguous picture
- Visual impairment often looks like cognitive or
motor impairment because it sub-serves both - Very difficult to tease out the visual impairment
- Requires careful observation and a thorough
understanding of the specific characteristics of
visual impairment - Aided by good understanding of neuroanatomy
- Correlate functional performance with location of
brain injury
57Challenges
- Critical to collaborate with other professionals
- Must have good communication with ophthalmologist
or optometrist - Not part of the standard of care yet
- Requires OT to facilitate referral
- Means that OT must be able to complete a good
screening and justify request for referral - Critical that OT, PT, Speech and Nursing
communicate and work together - OT must be able to communicate how vision affects
functional performance
58Challenges
- Visual impairment manifests over a long period of
time - Difficult to complete standardized evaluations in
acute phases of recovery - Must rely on observations
- Some visual impairments only become identifiable
after other impairments have resolved - Visual impairment persists after other
impairments have resolved - If you miss it initially, you still have time to
identify the impairment
59Challenges
- More visual impairments will occur with traumatic
brain injury and it will be more difficult to
identify the impairment - Brainstem plays a major role in coordinating
visual function and is very vulnerable in head
trauma - Damaged in 90 of cases
- Diffuse axonal injury causes disruption of visual
processing on many levels - Extent of permanent impairment may not be known
immediately
60Challenges
- Patients with stroke often show a mixture of
neuro-related and age related impairment - Conditions such as diabetes, atherosclerosis,
cardiac disease, hypertension contribute to
stroke and also cause retinal damage - Older patients will have normal age related
impairment in addition to acquired conditions - Although stroke and head trauma are the major
causes of visual impairment they are not the only
causes - Neurological diseases also cause impairment
- Parkinsons, multiple sclerosis, Huntingtons, etc.
61Evaluation and Treatment Approach
62General Approach
- In working with patients, vision must be viewed
as part of a unified process used by the CNS to
adapt to the environment and circumstances - Not a singular, simple modality
- Ability to see the letter on an eye chart
- Not a series of discrete skills
- Little compartments in brain for position in
space, visual closure, figure ground perception
63Viewed as part of a unified process
- A patients visual performance is not significant
in terms of how it deviates from the norm but how
it interferes with occupational performance - Whether or not a patient has a visual deficit
that requires remediation depends on his/her life
demands
64- A patient has a visual deficit if his/her ability
to obtain and/or process visual information has
been altered to the extent it prevents completion
of a necessary activity of daily living - Viewing it from this perspective helps determine
medical necessity - Determine if treatment intervention is required
and justified
65OT Evaluation has 4 purposes
- Identify the limitation in occupational
performance - Link the performance limitation to the presence
of an impairment - Determine if treatment is necessary
- Identify most appropriate treatment intervention
66Criteria for Treatment Intervention
- A person has a visual impairment that merits
treatment intervention ONLY if it interferes with
completion of a necessary activity of daily
living - Therefore observation of the patients functional
performance is the cornerstone of evaluation
67Two Treatment Approaches
- Person centered approach
- Emphasis is on changing the person
- Improving ability to take in and process visual
information - Environment centered approach
- Emphasis is on altering the environment to
achieve a better person-environment fit - Enable the person to respond with remaining
capabilities
68Education is a Critical Component of Treatment
- Education is critical to success because insight
is critical to persons ability to adapt - Education is particularly important for persons
with visual impairment because we dont typically
question the accuracy of our vision - One reason why it takes a long time for 40
somethings to realize that they need reading
glasses for presbyopia
69Goal never changes.
- Goal is always occupational performance
- Same as for any disability
- Only the method changes
- Instead of treating a patient with function
limitations from a motor deficit, youre treating
limitations from a visual deficit - You will continue to provide occupational therapy
- This is NOT vision therapy and you are NOT a
vision therapist
70 Professionals Involved in TX
- Ophthalmologist
- Neuro-ophthalmologist
- Board certified in dx/management of visual
conditions caused by neurological impairment - Optometrist
- Neuro or behavioral
- Orientation Mobility Specialist
- Addresses travel impairments
- Rehabilitation Teacher
- Involved if visual acuity is significantly
affected - Vision Teachers
- Involved in patient is K-12
71Case Application
- Billy Ray Bottlerocket
- 19 yr old
- Sustained a closed head injury after being thrown
from a 4 wheeler while off-roading with friends
72Billy Ray
- Lives with his parents
- Buddy and Eulaha
- Older sister, Buffy attends Jefferson State
73Billy Ray
- Works as a grounds keeper at the Hoover Country
Club - Prized possession
- An Alabama red Ford 150 4x4
74Billy Ray
- 6 weeks post injury
- Comatose for 3 weeks after his injury
- Sustained a severely crushed right ankle in
addition to the head injury - Casted and non weight bearing at this time
- Cognitive Status
- Rancho Level IV-V
- Motor Status
- Limited ROM left UE/LE with residual increased
tone - Mild ataxia right UE/LE