Comparison of the structural validity of three Balance Evaluation Systems Test in older adults with femoral or vertebral fracture

Objective: To clarify and compare the structural validity of 3 Balance Evaluation Systems Tests (BESTest, Mini-BESTest, and Brief-BESTest) in older adults with femoral or vertebral fractures. Design: Cross-sectional study. Subjects: Ninety-four older adults (age ?65 years) with femoral or vertebra...

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Main Authors: Kazuhiro Miyata, Satoshi Hasegawa, Hiroki Iwamoto, Tomohiro Otani, Yoichi Kaizu, Tomoyuki Shinohara, Shigeru Usuda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Foundation for Rehabilitation Information 2020-07-01
Series:Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access: https://www.medicaljournals.se/jrm/content/html/10.2340/16501977-2709
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spelling doaj-b693eae822af4bb59102d29080d6e5832020-11-25T03:48:13ZengFoundation for Rehabilitation InformationJournal of Rehabilitation Medicine1650-19771651-20812020-07-01527jrm0007910.2340/16501977-27092676Comparison of the structural validity of three Balance Evaluation Systems Test in older adults with femoral or vertebral fractureKazuhiro Miyata0Satoshi HasegawaHiroki IwamotoTomohiro OtaniYoichi KaizuTomoyuki ShinoharaShigeru Usuda Department of Physical Therapy, Ibaraki Prefectural University of Health Science, 300-0394 Inashiki-gun, Japan. E-mail: miyatak@ipu.ac.jp. Objective: To clarify and compare the structural validity of 3 Balance Evaluation Systems Tests (BESTest, Mini-BESTest, and Brief-BESTest) in older adults with femoral or vertebral fractures. Design: Cross-sectional study. Subjects: Ninety-four older adults (age ?65 years) with femoral or vertebral fractures, who could walk without physical assistance. Methods: Four BESTest models (BESTest, one-factor Mini-BESTest, four-factor Mini-BESTest, and Brief-BESTest) were examined using confirmatory factor analysis, and the models goodness-of-fit was assessed. Unidimensionality of the best-fitting model was confirmed by Rasch principal component analysis on the residuals. Results: Confirmatory factor analysis showed that the four-factor Mini-BESTest model (comparative fit index?=?0.952; Tucker-Lewis index?=?0.937; root-mean square error of approximation?=?0.060; standardized root-mean-square residual?=?0.062) has a better structure than other models. The principal component analysis of standardized residuals showed that the variance attributable to Rasch factor was good, with eigenvalues <2, confirming the factors unidimensionality. Conclusion: The four-factor Mini-BESTest model shows good structural validity in older adults with femoral or vertebral fracture. Evaluating dynamic balance by focusing on 4 components (anticipatory postural adjustments, postural responses, sensory orientation, and stability in gait) may help therapists in making clinical decisions. https://www.medicaljournals.se/jrm/content/html/10.2340/16501977-2709 validity femoral fracture vertebral fracture bestest.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kazuhiro Miyata
Satoshi Hasegawa
Hiroki Iwamoto
Tomohiro Otani
Yoichi Kaizu
Tomoyuki Shinohara
Shigeru Usuda
spellingShingle Kazuhiro Miyata
Satoshi Hasegawa
Hiroki Iwamoto
Tomohiro Otani
Yoichi Kaizu
Tomoyuki Shinohara
Shigeru Usuda
Comparison of the structural validity of three Balance Evaluation Systems Test in older adults with femoral or vertebral fracture
Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine
validity
femoral fracture
vertebral fracture
bestest.
author_facet Kazuhiro Miyata
Satoshi Hasegawa
Hiroki Iwamoto
Tomohiro Otani
Yoichi Kaizu
Tomoyuki Shinohara
Shigeru Usuda
author_sort Kazuhiro Miyata
title Comparison of the structural validity of three Balance Evaluation Systems Test in older adults with femoral or vertebral fracture
title_short Comparison of the structural validity of three Balance Evaluation Systems Test in older adults with femoral or vertebral fracture
title_full Comparison of the structural validity of three Balance Evaluation Systems Test in older adults with femoral or vertebral fracture
title_fullStr Comparison of the structural validity of three Balance Evaluation Systems Test in older adults with femoral or vertebral fracture
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of the structural validity of three Balance Evaluation Systems Test in older adults with femoral or vertebral fracture
title_sort comparison of the structural validity of three balance evaluation systems test in older adults with femoral or vertebral fracture
publisher Foundation for Rehabilitation Information
series Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine
issn 1650-1977
1651-2081
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Objective: To clarify and compare the structural validity of 3 Balance Evaluation Systems Tests (BESTest, Mini-BESTest, and Brief-BESTest) in older adults with femoral or vertebral fractures. Design: Cross-sectional study. Subjects: Ninety-four older adults (age ?65 years) with femoral or vertebral fractures, who could walk without physical assistance. Methods: Four BESTest models (BESTest, one-factor Mini-BESTest, four-factor Mini-BESTest, and Brief-BESTest) were examined using confirmatory factor analysis, and the models goodness-of-fit was assessed. Unidimensionality of the best-fitting model was confirmed by Rasch principal component analysis on the residuals. Results: Confirmatory factor analysis showed that the four-factor Mini-BESTest model (comparative fit index?=?0.952; Tucker-Lewis index?=?0.937; root-mean square error of approximation?=?0.060; standardized root-mean-square residual?=?0.062) has a better structure than other models. The principal component analysis of standardized residuals showed that the variance attributable to Rasch factor was good, with eigenvalues <2, confirming the factors unidimensionality. Conclusion: The four-factor Mini-BESTest model shows good structural validity in older adults with femoral or vertebral fracture. Evaluating dynamic balance by focusing on 4 components (anticipatory postural adjustments, postural responses, sensory orientation, and stability in gait) may help therapists in making clinical decisions.
topic validity
femoral fracture
vertebral fracture
bestest.
url https://www.medicaljournals.se/jrm/content/html/10.2340/16501977-2709
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