Cook Chad, Hegedus Eric, Hawkins Richard, Scovell Field, Wyland Doug
Department of Community and Family Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27708, USA.
Physiother Can. 2010 Winter;62(1):17-24. doi: 10.3138/physio.62.1.17. Epub 2010 Feb 22.
To investigate the diagnostic accuracy and association to disability of selected functional findings or physical examination tests for patellofemoral pain syndrome (PFPS) in patients with anterior knee pain.
A sample of 76 consecutive patients with anterior knee pain was further subdivided into PFPS and other diagnoses. Routine physical examination tests were examined in a prospective, consecutive-subjects design for a cohort of patients with anterior knee pain. Diagnostic accuracy findings, including sensitivity, specificity, positive (PPV) and negative (NPV) predictive value, and positive (LR+) and negative (LR-) likelihood ratios, were calculated for each test. PPV and NPV reflect the percentage of time of positive or a negative test (respectively) accurately captures the diagnosis of the condition. LR+ and LR- reflect alterations in post-test probability when the test is positive or negative (respectively). Lastly, associations to disability (International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) subjective form) were calculated for each clinical finding.
Diagnostic accuracy analyses of individual functional assessment and situational phenomena suggest that the strongest diagnostic test is pain encountered during resisted muscle contraction of the knee (PPV=82%; LR+=2.2; 95% CI: 0.99-5.2). Clusters of test findings were substantially more diagnostic, with any two of three positive findings of muscle contraction, pain during squatting, and pain during palpation yielding the following values: PPV=89%; LR+=4.0 (95% CI: 1.8-10.3). No individual or clustered test findings were significantly associated with the IKDC score.
Combinations of functional assessment tests and situational phenomena are diagnostic for PFPS and may serve to rule in and rule out the presence of PFPS. Single findings are not related to disability scores (IKDC).
探讨针对膝前痛患者的髌股关节疼痛综合征(PFPS),某些特定功能检查结果或体格检查测试的诊断准确性及其与残疾的关联。
76例连续的膝前痛患者样本被进一步细分为PFPS组和其他诊断组。采用前瞻性、连续受试者设计,对一组膝前痛患者进行常规体格检查测试。计算每项测试的诊断准确性结果,包括敏感性、特异性、阳性预测值(PPV)和阴性预测值(NPV),以及阳性似然比(LR+)和阴性似然比(LR-)。PPV和NPV分别反映阳性或阴性测试结果准确诊断该疾病的时间百分比。LR+和LR-分别反映测试结果为阳性或阴性时,测试后概率的变化。最后,计算每项临床检查结果与残疾程度(国际膝关节文献委员会(IKDC)主观量表)的关联。
个体功能评估和情境现象的诊断准确性分析表明,最强的诊断测试是膝关节抗阻肌肉收缩时出现的疼痛(PPV = 82%;LR+ = 2.2;95% CI:0.99 - 5.2)。多项测试结果组合的诊断价值显著更高,肌肉收缩、下蹲时疼痛和触诊时疼痛这三项结果中任意两项为阳性时,结果如下:PPV = 89%;LR+ = 4.0(95% CI:1.8 - 10.3)。没有任何单项或多项测试结果与IKDC评分有显著关联。
功能评估测试和情境现象的组合对PFPS具有诊断意义,可用于确诊和排除PFPS。单项检查结果与残疾评分(IKDC)无关。