| Literature DB >> 29587843 |
Montana Buntragulpoontawee1, Suphatha Phutrit1, Siam Tongprasert1, Tinakon Wongpakaran2, Jeeranan Khunachiva3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated additional psychometric properties of the Thai version of the disabilities of the arm, shoulder and hand questionnaire (DASH-TH) which included, test-retest reliability, construct validity, internal consistency of in patients with carpal tunnel syndrome. As for determining construct validity, the Thai EuroQOL questionnaire (EQ-5D-5L) was also administered in order to examine convergent and divergent validity.Entities:
Keywords: Carpal tunnel syndrome; DASH-TH; Factor structure; Internal consistency; Reliability; Validity
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29587843 PMCID: PMC5872536 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-018-3318-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Fig. 1Flow diagram demonstrating enrollment, electrodiagnostic procedure and data collection
Demographic characteristics
| Characteristics | Mean (SD) |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 53.92 (12.17) |
| Duration of symptoms (months) | 7.26 (10.03) |
N number of hands
Comparing fit statistics among models (N = 90)
| Fit indices | Hypothesized-5 factora | Six-factor | Five-factor | Four-factor | Three-factor | Two-factor | One-factor |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chi square | 976.995 | 390.704 | 518.185 | 685.468 | 840.903 | 1228.741 | 1266.713 |
| Df | 395 | 270 | 295 | 321 | 348 | 376 | 405 |
| RMSEA | 0.128 (0.118 0.138) | 0.070 (0.054 0.085) | 0.092 (0.079 0.105) | 0.112 (0.101 0.124) | 0.125 (0.115 0.136) | 0.159 (0.115 0.169) | 0.206 (0.193 0.219) |
| CFI | 0.967 | 0.993 | 0.987 | 0.979 | 0.972 | 0.952 | 0.840 |
| TLI | 0.964 | 0.989 | 0.981 | 0.972 | 0.965 | 0.944 | 0.828 |
| SRMR/WRMR | 0.968b | 0.042 | 0.049 | 0.059 | 0.068 | 0.090 | 0.152 |
Df degree of freedom, RMSEA root-mean-square error of approximation, CFI comparative fit index, SRMR standardized root-mean-square residual, TLI Tucker–Lewis index, WRMR weighted root mean square residual
aCFA 5 domain: factor 1, 1–16; factor 2, 17–21; factor 3, 22–23; factor 4, 24–28; factor 5, 29–30
bThis value was calculated by WRMR