Paul S S, Lester M E, Foreman K B, Dibble L E
Department of Physical Therapy, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, 84108.
The George Institute for Global Health, Sydney Medical School, The University of Sydney, New South Wales, 2050, Australia.
Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2016 Sep;299(9):1165-73. doi: 10.1002/ar.23385. Epub 2016 Jul 9.
Frequently, clinical balance outcome measures are limited by floor or ceiling effects and provide insufficient resolution to determine subtle deficits. Detailed assessment of postural control obtained through posturography may be cost-prohibitive or logistically infeasible in some clinical settings. Two-dimensional (2D) motion analysis may provide a clinically feasible means of obtaining detailed quantification of balance deficits. Forty-five participants aged 18-80 years, with and without Parkinson disease, performed the Push and Release (PR) test, sit-to-stand (STS), and timed single leg stance (SLS). Performance was captured simultaneously using a three-dimensional (3D) (10-camera laboratory-based 3D motion capture system and 3D motion analysis software) and 2D (two commercially available video cameras and 2D motion analysis software) system. Agreement was excellent between 2D and 3D systems for all outcomes of the PR and SLS (intraclass correlation coefficients [ICC2,1 ] 0.96-0.99, 95% CIs 0.92-0.98 to 0.99-1.0), and ranged from fair to excellent for STS outcomes (ICC2,1 0.59-0.93, 95% CIs 0.36-0.75 to 0.87-0.96). Test-retest reliability (ICC3,1 0.89-1.0, 95% CIs 0.76-0.96 to 1.0-1.0) and inter-rater reliability (ICC2,1 0.77-1.0, 95% CIs 0.61-0.87 to 1.0-1.0) of the 2D obtained outcomes were excellent. A technology package of commonly available video cameras and 2D motion analysis software was a valid and reliable method for quantifying outcomes of postural control tasks in people with a range of balance abilities. Two-dimensional analysis can be used in clinical practice to provide balance assessments as a cost-effective alternative to 3D motion capture. Anat Rec, 299:1165-1173, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
临床上,平衡结果测量常常受到地板效应或天花板效应的限制,分辨率不足以确定细微的缺陷。在某些临床环境中,通过姿势描记法对姿势控制进行详细评估可能成本过高或在后勤上不可行。二维(2D)运动分析可能提供一种临床上可行的方法来详细量化平衡缺陷。45名年龄在18至80岁之间、有或没有帕金森病的参与者进行了推挽(PR)测试、坐立(STS)和定时单腿站立(SLS)测试。使用三维(3D)(基于实验室的10摄像头3D运动捕捉系统和3D运动分析软件)和二维(两个市售摄像机和2D运动分析软件)系统同时记录测试表现。二维和三维系统在PR和SLS的所有结果上一致性极佳(组内相关系数[ICC2,1]为0.96 - 0.99,95%置信区间为0.92 - 0.98至0.99 - 1.0),而STS结果的一致性从中等到极佳(ICC2,1为0.59 - 0.93,95%置信区间为0.36 - 0.75至0.87 - 0.96)。二维测量结果的重测信度(ICC3,1为0.89 - 1.0,95%置信区间为0.76 - 0.96至1.0 - 1.0)和评分者间信度(ICC2,1为0.77 - 1.0,95%置信区间为0.61 - 0.87至1.0 - 1.0)极佳。一套由市售摄像机和2D运动分析软件组成的技术组合是一种有效且可靠的方法,可用于量化具有不同平衡能力的人群的姿势控制任务结果。二维分析可用于临床实践,作为一种经济有效的替代方法来提供平衡评估,以替代三维运动捕捉。《解剖学记录》,299:1165 - 1173,2016年。© 2016威利期刊公司。