Literature DB >> 22960671

Inter-tester reliability of discriminatory examination items for sub-classifying non-specific low back pain.

Evdokia Billis1, Christopher J McCarthy, John Gliatis, Matthiew Gittins, Maria Papandreou, Jacqueline A Oldham.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the inter-tester reliability of a non-specific low back pain examination procedure, for sub-classifying non-specific low back pain.
DESIGN: Reliability study. PARTICIPANTS: Thirty patients with non-specific low back pain (12 males, 18 females, mean age: 27.7 years (standard deviation 10.3) and 7 physiotherapists (raters).
METHODS: Based on a health professionals' consensus via focus groups and a Delphi servey, an examination procedure was developed comprising 206 items discriminatory for non-specific low back pain, 108 of which were from the History (clinical questions) and 98 from the Physical Examination (clinical tests) section. Utilizing this procedure, each patient was examined by a blinded pair of raters.
RESULTS: Moderate to excellent agreement was obtained in 125 (61%) items (77 History and 48 Physical Examination items), 47 of which obtained substantial or excellent agreement (kappa >0.61), 37 moderate agreement (kappa between 0.41 and 0.6), and 41 excellent percentage agreements. Poor reliability (kappa < 0.41) was yielded in the remaining 81 items (31 History and 50 Physical Examination items).
CONCLUSION: Satisfactory reliability was obtained in nearly two-thirds of History and half of the Physical Examination items on a non-specific low back pain assessment list generated through consensus agreement. These findings provide clinicians and researchers with valuable information regarding which items are considered reliable and can be utilized in non-specific low back pain patient evaluation/assessment procedures, classification attempts and clinical trials.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22960671     DOI: 10.2340/16501977-0950

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Rehabil Med        ISSN: 1650-1977            Impact factor:   2.912


  3 in total

1.  Subgroups in chronic low back pain patients - a step toward cluster-based, tailored treatment in inpatient standard care: On the need for precise targeting of treatment for chronic low back pain.

Authors:  Anna-Maria Langenmaier; Volker Eric Amelung; Matthias Karst; Christian Krauth; Franziska Püschner; Dominika Urbanski; Christine Schiessl; Reinhard Thoma; Bernhard Klasen
Journal:  Ger Med Sci       Date:  2019-09-11

2.  A multisite longitudinal evaluation of patient characteristics associated with a poor response to non-surgical multidisciplinary management of low back pain in an advanced practice physiotherapist-led tertiary service.

Authors:  Shaun O'Leary; Maree Raymer; Peter Window; Patrick Swete Kelly; Darryl Lee; Linda Garsden; Rebecca Tweedy; Ben Phillips; Will O'Sullivan; Anneke Wake; Alison Smith; Sheryl Pahor; Luen Pearce; Rod McLean; David Thompson; Erica Williams; Damien Nolan; Jody Anning; Ian Seels; Daniel Wickins; Darryn Marks; Brendan Diplock; Vicki Parravicini; Linda Parnwell; Bill Vicenzino; Tracy Comans; Michelle Cottrell; Asaduzzaman Khan; Steven McPhail
Journal:  BMC Musculoskelet Disord       Date:  2020-12-03       Impact factor: 2.362

Review 3.  Perspectives on next steps in classification of oro-facial pain - part 1: role of ontology.

Authors:  W Ceusters; A Michelotti; K G Raphael; J Durham; R Ohrbach
Journal:  J Oral Rehabil       Date:  2015-07-25       Impact factor: 3.837

  3 in total

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