Evaluating for a correlation between osteopathic examination and ultrasonography on thoracic spine asymmetry

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Evaluating for a correlation between osteopathic examination and ultrasonography on thoracic spine asymmetry
المؤلفون: Scott Messier, Shirley Chang, Jason Maddox, Amy Buros Stein, G Nathan Nakken, Karen Kim, Randall L. Nydam, Richard Dobrusin, Jeannine Noble, Erich J Berg, Loren Swanson
المصدر: Journal of Osteopathic Medicine. 122:31-43
بيانات النشر: Walter de Gruyter GmbH, 2021.
سنة النشر: 2021
مصطلحات موضوعية: Complementary and Manual Therapy, Orthodontics, education.field_of_study, medicine.diagnostic_test, Osteopathic Structural Examination, business.industry, Population, Somatic dysfunction, Reproducibility of Results, Context (language use), Palpation, Thoracic Vertebrae, Vertebra, medicine.anatomical_structure, Complementary and alternative medicine, Osteopathic Physicians, Thoracic vertebrae, medicine, Humans, business, education, Osteopathic Medicine, Ultrasonography, Rank correlation
الوصف: Context The thoracic spine is a common area of focus in osteopathic manipulative medicine (OMM) for a variety of conditions. Thoracic spine somatic dysfunction diagnosis is achieved by palpating for asymmetry at the tips of the transverse processes (TPs). Previous studies reveal that instead of following the rule of threes, the TPs of a given thoracic vertebra generally align with the spinous process (SP) of the vertebra above. Ultrasonography has been widely utilized as a diagnostic tool to monitor musculoskeletal conditions; it does not utilize ionizing radiation, and it has comparable results to gold-standard modalities. In the case of thoracic somatic dysfunction, ultrasound (US) can be utilized to determine the location of each vertebral TP and its relationship with the SP. Previous studies have investigated the correlation between OMM and ultrasonography of the cervical, lumbar, and sacral regions. However, there has been no study yet that has compared osteopathic structural examination with ultrasonographic examination of the thoracic vertebral region. Objectives To examine the relationship between osteopathic palpation and ultrasonographic measurements of the thoracic spine by creating a study design that utilizes interexaminer agreement and correlation. Methods The ClinicalTrials.gov study identifier is NCT04823637. Subjects were student volunteers recruited from the Midwestern University (MWU)—Glendale campus. A nontoxic, nonpermanent marker was utilized to mark bony landmarks on the skin. Two neuromusculoskeletal board-certified physicians (OMM1, OMM2) separately performed structural exams by palpating T2–T5 TPs to determine vertebral rotation. Two sonographers (US1, US2) separately scanned and measured the distance from the tip of the SP to the adjacent TPs of the vertebral segment below. Demographic variables were summarized with mean and standard deviation. Interexaminer agreement was assessed with percent agreement, Cohen’s Kappa, and Fleiss’ Kappa. Correlation was measured by Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient. Recruitment and protocols were approved by the MWU Institutional Review Board (IRB). Results US had fair interexaminer agreement for the overall most prominent segmental rotation of the T3–T5 thoracic spine, with Cohen’s Kappa at 0.27 (0.09, 0.45), and a total agreement percentage at 51.5%. Osteopathic palpation revealed low interexaminer agreement for the overall most prominent vertebral rotation, with Cohen’s Kappa at 0.05 (0.0, 0.27), and 31.8%. Segment-specific vertebral analysis revealed slight agreement between US examiners, with a correlation coefficient of 0.23, whereas all other pairwise comparisons showed low agreement and correlation. At T4, US had slight interexaminer agreement with 0.24 correlation coefficient, and osteopathic palpation showed low interexaminer (OMM1 vs. OMM2) agreement (0.17 correlation coefficient). At T5, there was moderate agreement between the two sonographers with 0.44 (0.27, 0.60) and 63.6%, with a correlation coefficient of 0.57, and slight agreement between OMM1 and OMM2 with 0.12 (0.0, 0.28) and 42.4%, with 0.23 correlation coefficient. Conclusions This preliminary study of an asymptomatic population revealed that there is a low-to-moderate interexaminer reliability between sonographers, low-to-slight interexaminer reliability between osteopathic physicians, and low interexaminer reliability between OMM palpatory examination and ultrasonographic evaluation of the thoracic spine.
تدمد: 2702-3648
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::eb5e00727763ebbc53b89272a14e74d4
https://doi.org/10.1515/jom-2021-0020
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....eb5e00727763ebbc53b89272a14e74d4
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE