| Literature DB >> 25729566 |
Robert Cooperstein1, Michael Haneline2, Morgan Young1.
Abstract
Practitioners in several of the health care professions use anatomical landmarks to identify spinal levels, both in order to enhance diagnostic accuracy and to specifically target the site of intervention. Authoritative sources usually state the upright inferior scapular angle (IAS) aligns with the spinous process (SP) of T7, but some specify the T7-8 interspace or the T8 SP. The primary goals of this study were to systematically review the relevant literature; and conduct a meta-analysis of the pooled data from retrieved studies to increase their statistical power. Electronic searching retrieved primary studies relating the IAS to a spinal level, as determined by an imaging reference standard, using combinations of these search terms: scapula, location, landmark, spinous process, thoracic vertebrae, vertebral level, palpation, and spine. Only primary studies were included; review articles and reliability studies related to scapular position but lacking spinal correlations were excluded. Eight-hundred and eighty (880) articles of interest were identified, 43 abstracts were read, 22 full text articles were inspected, and 5 survived the final cut. Each article (with one exception) was rated for quality using the QUADAS instrument. Pooling data from 5 studies resulted in normal distribution in which the upright IAS on average aligns closely with the T8 SP, range T4-T11. Since on average the IAS most closely identifies the T8 SP in the upright position, it is very likely that health professionals, both manual therapists and others, who have been diagnosing and treating patients based on the IAS = T7 SP rule (the conventional wisdom), have not been as segmentally accurate as they may have supposed. They either addressed non-intended levels, or made numeration errors in their charting. There is evidence that using the IAS is less preferred than using the vertebra prominens, and may be less preferred than using the iliac crest for identifying spinal levels Manual therapists, acupuncturists, anesthesiologists, nurses, and surgeons should reconsider their procedures for identifying spinal sites in light of this modified information. Inaccurate landmark benchmark rules will add to patient variation and examiner errors in producing spine care targeting errors, and confound research on the importance of specificity in treating spinal levels.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25729566 PMCID: PMC4343265 DOI: 10.1186/s12998-014-0050-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chiropr Man Therap ISSN: 2045-709X
STARLITE search strategy summary
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| Type of studies | Anatomical studies investigating the spinal level corresponding to the scapula |
| Approaches | “Related articles” function used following successful retrieval. Secondary search to reach point of data saturation. Google searching. |
| Range of years | No restrictions. |
| Limits | Only English-language articles were included. |
| Inclusions/Exclusions | Included only primary studies where the spinal level corresponding to the scapula was identified through comparison with an imaging reference standard. Reliability studies and reviews of the literature were excluded. Intraoperative and cadaveric studies were excluded. |
| Terms used | Combinations of Non-MesH terms (Spinous Process, Thoracic Vertebrae, Vertebral Level, Validity) and MeSH terms (Scapula, Spine, Palpation, Diagnostic Techniques and Procedures, Diagnostic Imaging, Physical Examination, Anatomic Landmarks, Thorax, Reproducibility of Results). |
| Electronic sources | PubMed, MANTIS, ICL, CINAHL, AMED, Osteopathic Research Web, OstMed, Google. |
Figure 1Flow diagram for literature retrieval.
Studies mapping the IAS to a spinal landmark in the upright position
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| Cooperstein, 2007 [ | n = 34, 59% male; mean Y/O = 26; all healthy | Radio-opaque marker placed on ISA, compared with spinal radiography | T6: 5.9% | n/a | 11 |
| T7: 17.6% | |||||
| T8: 47.1% | |||||
| T9: 26.5% | |||||
| T10: 2.9 | |||||
| Haneline, 2008 [ | n = 50, 50% male; mean Y/O = 47.5; health status unknown | Radiographic mensuration of scapula and spine | T6: 8.0% | Left and right scapular positions averaged | n/a |
| T7: 26.0% | |||||
| T8: 56.0 | |||||
| T9: 10.0% | |||||
| Teoh, 2009 [ | n = 104, 54.8% male; mean Y/O; receiving chest radiography | Radio-opaque marker placed on ISA, compared with spinal radiography | T6: 1.0% | n/a | 14 |
| T7: 9.6% | |||||
| T8: 30.8% | |||||
| T9: 36.5% | |||||
| T10: 16.3% | |||||
| T11: 5.8% | |||||
| Arzola, 2011 [ | n = 55, 41.8% male; mean Y/O 30.7; all healthy | Ultrasonography | T6: 3.6% | Intervertebral space findings apportioned equally to segments above and below | 13 |
| T7: 12.7% | |||||
| T8: 29.1% | |||||
| T9: 29.1% | |||||
| T10: 16.4% | |||||
| T11: 9.1% | |||||
| Kim, 2012 [ | n = 100, 33% male; mean Y/O = 49.3; all symptomatic, variety of conditions | Epidural insertion level as seen on radiography | T5: 1% | Subtracted 1 spinal level to account for use of epidural position | 14 |
| T6: 1% | |||||
| T7: 25% | |||||
| T8: 62% | |||||
| T9: 10% | |||||
| T10: 1% |
*Spinal levels corresponding to IAS reported following data transformation for uniform reporting and data pooling.
QUADAS ratings
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| 1. Was the spectrum of patients representative of the patients who will receive the test in practice? | N | Y | N | Y |
| 2. Were selection criteria clearly described? | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| 3. Is the reference standard likely to correctly classify the target condition? | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| 4. Is the time period between reference standard and index test short enough to be reasonably sure that the target condition did not change between the 2 tests? | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| 5. Did the whole sample or a random selection of the sample receive verification using a reference standard of diagnosis? | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| 6. Did patients receive the same reference standard regardless of the index text result? | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| 7. Was the reference standard independent of the index test (ie, the index test did not form part of the reference standard)? | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| 8. Was the execution of the index test described in sufficient detail to permit replication of the test? | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| 9. Was the execution of the reference standard described in sufficient detail to permit its replication? | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| 10. Were the index test results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the reference standard? | N | Y | Y | Y |
| 11. Were the reference standard results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the index test? | N | Y | N | Y |
| 12. Were the same clinical data available when test results were interpreted as would be available when the test is used in practice? | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| 13. Were interpretable/intermediate test results reported? | Y | Y | Y | Y |
| 14. Were withdrawals from the study explained? | Y | Y | Y | Y |
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The Haneline study, one of the 5 articles included in this review, was not amenable to QUADAS rating and thus is not included in Table 3.
Figure 2Distribution of pooled data.
Figure 3Forest plot summarizing results of included studies.