

Author: Toyokura Minoru Ishida Akira Watanabe Fumihiro Okada Noriko Yamazaki Miyako
Publisher: Informa Healthcare
ISSN: 1464-5165
Source: Disability and Rehabilitation, Vol.25, Iss.24, 2003-12, pp. : 1339-1343
Disclaimer: Any content in publications that violate the sovereignty, the constitution or regulations of the PRC is not accepted or approved by CNPIEC.
Abstract
Purposes : To investigate intermanual differences in the performance of the Japanese Trail Making Test (JTMT) using an intra-subject comparison, and to investigate how the cognitive and motor times spent in performing the task were related with the total completion time. Methods : All subjects performed both parts A and B of the following three tasks: JTMT with the right hand (R); JTMT with the left hand (L); and a mirror version of the JTMT with the left hand (M). The order in which these three tasks were performed (RLM, RML, LRM, LMR, MRL, and MLR) was randomly determined. An interval of 4 weeks was scheduled between each examination. In addition to the completion time, we measured 'motor time', a sum of the times for drawing lines to connect the targets, and 'cognitive time', a time obtained by subtracting the motor time from the completion time. Results : The task-completion time was more strongly correlated with the cognitive time than with the motor time. The order of the task performance did not influence the task-completion time. A learning effect was found only between the first and second examinations of part A. The cognitive time for the second and third performances of part A were significantly shorter than that for the first task, whereas the motor time remained unchanged. No intermanual differences in the performance were found in any comparisons. Conclusions : The non-dominant hand can be used as an alternative hand in the JTMT, and it can be expected to perform comparably to the dominant hand. These findings are consistent with the finding previously obtained by inter-subject comparison. The lack of any significant intermanual difference can be explained by that the total completion time is less influenced by the motor time than by the cognitive time.
Related content




Community Practitioner, Vol. 82, Iss. 10, 2009-10 ,pp. :


By Watt Graham
British Journal of General Practice, Vol. 61, Iss. 590, 2011-09 ,pp. :


By Stevens Richard Mountford Ann
British Journal of General Practice, Vol. 60, Iss. 575, 2010-06 ,pp. :


The Bolam test: on borrowed time?
Quality in Primary Care, Vol. 11, Iss. 1, 2003-03 ,pp. :