Publication | Closed Access
An original clinical methodology for non-invasive assessment of pivot-shift test
115
Citations
32
References
2011
Year
Functional Movement ScreeningNeuromuscular CoordinationDiagnosisMovement BiomechanicsOrthopaedic SurgeryAnterior Cruciate LigamentMovement AnalysisKinesiologyApplied PhysiologyPivot-shift TestDisease AssessmentClinical EvaluationPhysical MedicineHealth SciencesMusculoskeletal ImagingDiagnostic CriterionKnee InjuriesMusculoskeletal FunctionRehabilitationPs Test ExecutionApplied NeuromechanicsExercise PhysiologyPs TestHuman MovementAthletic TrainingMedicineSport-related Injuries
Even if pivot-shift (PS) test has been clinically used to specifically detect anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury, the main problem in using this combined test has been yet associated with the difficulty of clearly quantifying its outcome. The goal of this study was to describe an original non-invasive methodology used to quantify PS test, highlighting its possible clinical reliability. The method was validated on 66 consecutive unilateral ACL-injured patients. A commercial triaxial accelerometer was non-invasively mounted on patient's tibia, the corresponding 3D acceleration was acquired during PS test execution and a set of specific parameters were automatically identified on the signal to quantify the test. PS test was repeated three times on both injured and controlateral limbs. Reliability of the method was found to be good (mean intra-rater intraclass correlation coefficient was 0.79); moreover, we found that ACL-deficient knees presented statistically higher values for the identified parameters – than the controlateral healthy limbs, averagely reporting also large effect size.
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