| Literature DB >> 35566448 |
Sandra Martínez-Bustelo1, Asunción Ferri-Morales2, Fernando J Castillo-García3, Antonio Madrid4,5, M Amalia Jácome6.
Abstract
The effect of different exercises on the position of pelvic organs in women has not been sufficiently assessed. The objective was to analyze the validity and reliability of a new two-dimensional ultrasound algorithm to measure offline the displacement of the bladder base during abdominal exercises. This algorithm could be a useful method to future studies in determine the most appropriate exercises in sports and in rehabilitative program for the pelvic floor in women. All subjects were tested by transverse transabdominal ultrasound. The measurements were conducted offline using a customized code written in MATLAB (Ecolab) for image-processing, and manually on the ultrasound monitor using electronic calipers. The agreement was assessed with a paired t-test, Pearson's linear correlation coefficient (r), the Lin's concordance correlation coefficient (CCC), the intraclass correlation coefficient ICC (A,2) and a Bland-Altman plot. The reliability was confirmed by the interdays intra-rater ICC coefficient. The results were that Ecolab and ultrasound transducer measures did not differ statistically (p = 0.246). Furthermore, both methods showed a very strong relationship, and the Ecolab demonstrated to be a valid and reliable method. We concluded that Ecolab seemed to be a valid and reliable tool to assess the effect of abdominal contractions in the female pelvic floor.Entities:
Keywords: MATLAB; pelvic floor muscles; physiotherapy; reliability; ultrasound; validity
Year: 2022 PMID: 35566448 PMCID: PMC9100058 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11092319
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
Figure 1Placement of the marker in the middle of the bladder base. Displacement δ of the bladder base between the resting position (left) and the position during the contraction (right).
Four perineal and abdominal contractions A–D that participants were instructed to perform randomly.
| EXERCISES | DESCRIPTION | PFM PRE-CONT a | EST. TIMELINE b |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Submaximal isometric PFM contraction while breathing out | YES | 3–7 |
|
| Submaximal isometric PFM and TrA c contraction while breathing out | YES | 3–7 |
|
| Equal to Contraction B + axial elongation of the whole spine (AEB) d | YES | 3–7 |
|
| PFM submaximal contraction RA e + OE f OI g + holding apnea | YES | 3–7 |
a PFM PRE-CONT, Pelvic floor muscles pre-contraction held during the whole contraction; b EST TIMELINE, Estimated timeline in seconds; c TrA, Transversus abdominis muscle; d AEB, Axial elongation of the back; e RA, Rectus Abdominis; f OE, Obliquus externus muscle; g OI, Obliquus internus muscle.
Figure 2Graphical user interface.
Figure 3The value of represents the color intensity of channel of the pixel located in row i and column j of frame .
Figure 4(a) Collage of frames. (b) Visualization of results.
Validity of the MATLAB algorithm (Ecolab) to measure the displacement (cm) compared with the ultrasound transducer (manual) and inter-day reliability of the MATLAB algorithm.
| Perineal and Abdominal Contraction | MATLAB Algorithm Validity ( | MATLAB Algorithm Inter-Day Reliability ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICC (A,2) | 95% CI | ICC (1,2) | 95% CI | |
| A | 0.96 | (0.92, 0.98) | 0.96 | (0.92, 0.98) |
| B | 0.98 | (0.97, 0.99) | ||
| C | 0.99 | (0.99, 0.99) | ||
| D | 0.98 | (0.97, 0.99) | ||
ICC = intraclass correlation coefficient; CI = confidence interval.
Figure 5Scatterplot and correlation values for the measures given by Ecolab on the y-axis and by ultrasound transducer on the x-axis, with the linear regression fit (solid line) and the identity y = x line (dashed 45° line).
Figure 6Bland–Altman plot (n = 27 volunteers). Differences in the measurements estimated with the Ecolab and the ultrasound transducers on the y-axis are plotted against the mean of the measurements with both methods on the x-axis. The mean difference () and the relevant 95% confidence limits ( are indicated by the horizontal dashed lines.