| Literature DB >> 9653793 |
J Kelemen1, M Eichhorn, K Ovenhausen, W Lorensen, W Müller.
Abstract
Developed by Orthotronic Medizintechnik GmbH, the so-called Triflexometer, version 3.22 was tested for its reliability and validity in measuring spinal posture and mobility. Reliability studies on 20 healthy subjects have shown this measurement method to be reliable, yet intra- and inter-rater reliability analyses also revealed that even for this healthy population discrepancies in the various measures may occur, both due to differences in compliance as well as fatigue and learning effects, and due to difficulties in stabilization of the normal posture, to a lesser extent due to certain specifics of the measurement technique (placing the markers, guiding the sensor). In total spinal immobility (ankylosing spondylitis), practically identical measurements are found, as is the case in dummy studies. The validity study on 20 healthy subjects found good correlations between the measurements obtaining using the triflexometer and those for double inclinometer, respectively, and that only minor mean value differences occur for the two methods. Also, triflexometer measurements for total anteflexion were found to correlate with those determined with the fingertip-to-floor method, no correlation was present however between the Triflexometer values and the Schober test. Triflexometer measurements performed on 114 healthy subjects of various ages served to prove that the range of spinal movement in the directions measured (sagittal and frontal) will reduce with age. To a lesser extent, this also applies to hip movement. Overall, our findings prove the triflexometer an easy-to-handle system which possesses high reliability and is suitable for valid and objective noninvasive assessment of global and segmental spinal mobility. Triflexometer examinations are highly uncomplicated to implement, and print-outs of the results obtained permit lasting documentation of the present status.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1998 PMID: 9653793
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rehabilitation (Stuttg) ISSN: 0034-3536 Impact factor: 1.113