Reliability of Phase Velocity Measurements of Flexural Acoustic Waves in the Human Tibia In-Vivo.

Axial-transmission acoustics have shown to be a promising technique to measure individual bone properties and detect bone pathologies. With the ultimate goal being the in-vivo application of such systems, quantification of the key aspects governing the reliability is crucial to bring this method tow...

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Main Authors: Florian Vogl, Karin Schnüriger, Hans Gerber, William R Taylor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4807826?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-bdf092b7d73a411781d3d8b96cca5bb82020-11-25T01:18:47ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01113e015241710.1371/journal.pone.0152417Reliability of Phase Velocity Measurements of Flexural Acoustic Waves in the Human Tibia In-Vivo.Florian VoglKarin SchnürigerHans GerberWilliam R TaylorAxial-transmission acoustics have shown to be a promising technique to measure individual bone properties and detect bone pathologies. With the ultimate goal being the in-vivo application of such systems, quantification of the key aspects governing the reliability is crucial to bring this method towards clinical use.This work presents a systematic reliability study quantifying the sources of variability and their magnitudes of in-vivo measurements using axial-transmission acoustics. 42 healthy subjects were measured by an experienced operator twice per week, over a four-month period, resulting in over 150000 wave measurements. In a complementary study to assess the influence of different operators performing the measurements, 10 novice operators were trained, and each measured 5 subjects on a single occasion, using the same measurement protocol as in the first part of the study.The estimated standard error for the measurement protocol used to collect the study data was ∼ 17 m/s (∼ 4% of the grand mean) and the index of dependability, as a measure of reliability, was Φ = 0.81. It was shown that the method is suitable for multi-operator use and that the reliability can be improved efficiently by additional measurements with device repositioning, while additional measurements without repositioning cannot improve the reliability substantially. Phase velocity values were found to be significantly higher in males than in females (p < 10-5) and an intra-class correlation coefficient of r = 0.70 was found between the legs of each subject.The high reliability of this non-invasive approach and its intrinsic sensitivity to mechanical properties opens perspectives for the rapid and inexpensive clinical assessment of bone pathologies, as well as for monitoring programmes without any radiation exposure for the patient.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4807826?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Florian Vogl
Karin Schnüriger
Hans Gerber
William R Taylor
spellingShingle Florian Vogl
Karin Schnüriger
Hans Gerber
William R Taylor
Reliability of Phase Velocity Measurements of Flexural Acoustic Waves in the Human Tibia In-Vivo.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Florian Vogl
Karin Schnüriger
Hans Gerber
William R Taylor
author_sort Florian Vogl
title Reliability of Phase Velocity Measurements of Flexural Acoustic Waves in the Human Tibia In-Vivo.
title_short Reliability of Phase Velocity Measurements of Flexural Acoustic Waves in the Human Tibia In-Vivo.
title_full Reliability of Phase Velocity Measurements of Flexural Acoustic Waves in the Human Tibia In-Vivo.
title_fullStr Reliability of Phase Velocity Measurements of Flexural Acoustic Waves in the Human Tibia In-Vivo.
title_full_unstemmed Reliability of Phase Velocity Measurements of Flexural Acoustic Waves in the Human Tibia In-Vivo.
title_sort reliability of phase velocity measurements of flexural acoustic waves in the human tibia in-vivo.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Axial-transmission acoustics have shown to be a promising technique to measure individual bone properties and detect bone pathologies. With the ultimate goal being the in-vivo application of such systems, quantification of the key aspects governing the reliability is crucial to bring this method towards clinical use.This work presents a systematic reliability study quantifying the sources of variability and their magnitudes of in-vivo measurements using axial-transmission acoustics. 42 healthy subjects were measured by an experienced operator twice per week, over a four-month period, resulting in over 150000 wave measurements. In a complementary study to assess the influence of different operators performing the measurements, 10 novice operators were trained, and each measured 5 subjects on a single occasion, using the same measurement protocol as in the first part of the study.The estimated standard error for the measurement protocol used to collect the study data was ∼ 17 m/s (∼ 4% of the grand mean) and the index of dependability, as a measure of reliability, was Φ = 0.81. It was shown that the method is suitable for multi-operator use and that the reliability can be improved efficiently by additional measurements with device repositioning, while additional measurements without repositioning cannot improve the reliability substantially. Phase velocity values were found to be significantly higher in males than in females (p < 10-5) and an intra-class correlation coefficient of r = 0.70 was found between the legs of each subject.The high reliability of this non-invasive approach and its intrinsic sensitivity to mechanical properties opens perspectives for the rapid and inexpensive clinical assessment of bone pathologies, as well as for monitoring programmes without any radiation exposure for the patient.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4807826?pdf=render
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AT karinschnuriger reliabilityofphasevelocitymeasurementsofflexuralacousticwavesinthehumantibiainvivo
AT hansgerber reliabilityofphasevelocitymeasurementsofflexuralacousticwavesinthehumantibiainvivo
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