AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess how reliable six common cervical examination procedures are among different physical therapists.
  • A total of 51 patients aged 16-70 experiencing neck pain were independently examined by two blinded therapists, with agreement levels measured using kappa coefficients.
  • Results showed excellent reliability for certain asymmetry tests and moderate to substantial reliability for pain-related tests, while palpation without pain feedback had lower reliability, suggesting the need for correlation with clinical findings for accuracy.

Article Abstract

Objective: The objective of this study was to establish the level of inter-examiner reliability for six common cervical manual and physical examination procedures used to assess the cervical spine.

Materials: Reliability study that used a convenience sample of 51 patients between the ages of 16-70 years presenting with a chief complaint of neck pain. Two physical therapists independently performed the same series of cervical physical examination procedures on each of the participant. The clinicians were blinded to each other's findings and the clinical status of the patient. Kappa coefficients (κ) were calculated for levels of agreement between the clinicians for each procedure.

Results: When assessing for asymmetrical motion, excellent levels of reliability (κ range: 0.88-0.96) were observed for the Bilateral Modified Lateral Shear (asymmetry criterion), Bilateral C2 Spinous Kick (asymmetry criterion) and Flexion-Rotation Tests. When pain provocation was used as the indicator of a positive test during palpation of the cervical facet joints, moderate to substantial levels of reliability (κ range: 0.53-0.76) were observed. When patients were instructed not to provide feedback to the clinicians about pain provocation during facet joint palpation and clinicians relied solely on their qualitative assessment of segmental mobility, the level of reliability was lower (κ range: 0.45-0.53). Due to 100 % prevalence of negative findings, Kappa values could not be calculated for the Sharp-Purser test or the Unilateral C2 Spinous Kick Test.

Conclusions: Most physical examination procedures examined in this study demonstrated moderate to excellent levels of inter-examiner reliability. Palpation for segmental mobility without pain provocation demonstrated a lower level of reliability compared to palpation for pain provocation. Correlation with clinical findings is necessary to establish validity and the applicability of these procedures in clinical practice.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8201716PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12998-021-00377-2DOI Listing

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