Sinacore J Anthony, Evans Andrew M, Lynch Brittany N, Joreitz Richard E, Irrgang James J, Lynch Andrew D
J Orthop Sports Phys Ther. 2017 Feb;47(2):97-107. doi: 10.2519/jospt.2017.6651.
Study Design Clinical measurement, cross-sectional. Background Quadriceps deficits are common in individuals with knee joint impairments and impact functional and quality-of-life outcomes. Quadriceps strength symmetry influences clinical decisions after knee injury. Isometric electromechanical dynamometry (ISO-ED) is the gold standard for measuring symmetry, but is not available in all clinical settings. Objectives To compare concurrent validity of handheld dynamometry and 1-repetition-maximum leg press, knee extension from 90° to 0°, and knee extension from 90° to 45° to that of ISO-ED in identifying meaningful quadriceps strength deficits. Methods Fifty-six participants with knee joint impairments completed ISO-ED and 4 alternative measures of quadriceps strength symmetry in a single session. Absolute agreement of alternative measures with ISO-ED was calculated with intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs). Clinical agreement values at thresholds of 80% and 90% symmetry were compared between the alternatives and ISO-ED. Results Knee extension from 90° to 45° (ICC = 0.67) and handheld dynamometry (ICC = 0.70) had the greatest ICCs. Clinical agreement was also best for these measures for 80% symmetry (κ = 0.56 and 0.55, respectively) and 90% symmetry (κ = 0.19 and 0.33, respectively). Conclusion Handheld dynamometry and 1-repetition-maximum testing of knee extension from 90° to 45° are fair alternatives, although symmetry is typically overestimated. Receiver operating characteristic analysis identified alternative measure thresholds that correlated with the 80% and 90% symmetry thresholds on the ISO-ED. Clinicians should use more stringent symmetry values for these alternative tests to increase the probability that individuals have a minimum ISO-ED symmetry of 80% or 90%. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther 2017;47(2):97-107. doi:10.2519/jospt.2017.6651.
临床测量,横断面研究。背景:股四头肌功能缺陷在膝关节损伤患者中很常见,会影响功能和生活质量。股四头肌力量对称性会影响膝关节损伤后的临床决策。等长机电测力法(ISO-ED)是测量对称性的金标准,但并非在所有临床环境中都可用。目的:比较手持测力计、1次重复最大负荷腿举、膝关节从90°伸展至0°以及膝关节从90°伸展至45°与ISO-ED在识别有意义的股四头肌力量缺陷方面的同时效度。方法:56名膝关节损伤参与者在同一时段完成ISO-ED和4种股四头肌力量对称性的替代测量方法。用组内相关系数(ICC)计算替代测量方法与ISO-ED的绝对一致性。比较替代测量方法与ISO-ED在80%和90%对称性阈值时的临床一致性值。结果:膝关节从90°伸展至45°(ICC = 0.67)和手持测力计(ICC = 0.70)的ICC值最高。对于80%对称性(κ分别为0.56和0.55)和90%对称性(κ分别为0.19和0.33),这些测量方法的临床一致性也最佳。结论:手持测力计和膝关节从90°伸展至45°的1次重复最大负荷测试是合理的替代方法,尽管对称性通常被高估。受试者工作特征分析确定了与ISO-ED上80%和90%对称性阈值相关的替代测量阈值。临床医生应在这些替代测试中使用更严格的对称性值,以提高个体具有至少80%或90% ISO-ED对称性的概率。《骨科与运动物理治疗杂志》2017年;47(2):97 - 107。doi:10.2519/jospt.2017.6651 。