Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2625648 Manual Therapy 2009 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate the stability and intra-tester reliability of an innovative approach to measure active thoracic spine axial rotation. Ultrasound imaging of a thoracic vertebra in conjunction with Polhemus motion analysis of the transducer was used to measure axial thoracic spine rotation in a functional position. The range of motion in a convenience sample of asymptomatic subjects (n = 24) was calculated across ten repetitions of a single trial to evaluate stability. The protocol was repeated the same day and 7–10 days later to provide data for within and between day intra-tester reliability. Mean total range of axial rotation was 85.15 degrees across a single trial with SD = 14.8, CV = 17.4, SEM = 3.04. SEM ranged 0.63–3.37 for individual subjects and 2.60–3.64 across repetitions. Stability of performance occurred at repetitions 2–4. Intra-tester reliability (ICC2,1) was excellent within day (0.89–0.98) and good/excellent between days (0.72 0.94). Bland–Altman plots however suggest that agreement may range from 0 to 10% for within day measures and from 0 to 15% for between day measures. Whether this combined approach has sufficient precision and accuracy as a clinical research tool has yet to be fully evaluated.

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