Aim: To assess the validity of self-reported articulatory oral motor skill against objectively measured repetitive articulatory rate (oral diadochokinesis [oral-DDK]) as a gold standard index for articulatory oral motor skill in community-dwelling older Japanese adults. Methods: This cross-sectional study included 607 Japanese adults (mean age = 73.9 years). A single-item self-report questionnaire for articulatory oral motor skill was developed. Study participants completed a 1-month-interval test–retest protocol to assess reliability of the questionnaire, and the protocol was tested by the kappa statistic. Oral-DDK with /ta/ (i.e., the number of repetitions of the monosyllable /ta/ per second) was measured during the on-site examination. Low oral-DDK performance was defined as <5.2 times/s in men and <5.4 times/s in women. Oral-DDK performance, oral functions other than articulatory oral motor skill, and physical frailty were compared in the groups with and without self-reported low articulatory oral motor skill as determined by the response to the questionnaire. Results: Self-reported low articulatory oral motor skill was identified in 18.5% of the study population. The self-report questionnaire had good test–retest reliability, with a kappa statistic of 0.71. Self-reported low articulatory oral motor skill was significantly associated with a lower value of oral-DDK with /ta/ and a higher proportion of low oral-DDK performance, difficulties in chewing and swallowing, dry mouth, and physical frailty. Self-report had high specificity (83.1%) but low sensitivity (42.1%) for detecting low oral-DDK performance. Conclusions: A single-item self-report questionnaire for articulatory oral motor skill had acceptable test–retest reliability and was associated with objectively measured articulatory oral motor skill. Geriatr Gerontol Int 2023; 23: 729–735.
CITATION STYLE
Iwasaki, M., Shirobe, M., Motokawa, K., Hayakawa, M., Miura, K., Kalantar, L., … Hirano, H. (2023). Validation of self-reported articulatory oral motor skill against objectively measured repetitive articulatory rate in community-dwelling older Japanese adults: The Otassha Study. Geriatrics and Gerontology International, 23(10), 729–735. https://doi.org/10.1111/ggi.14658
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