Assessment of the Visa-A questionnaire for Achilles tendinopathy and its correlation with imaging
Background: Because Achilles tendon disorders, which are common, have a significant morbidity among athletes, further research into efficacious treatments is necessary. Yet there is a lack of objective or quantifiable outcome measurement tools. Purpose: The purpose of this thesis was to investiga...
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ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-107462018-01-05T17:35:28Z Assessment of the Visa-A questionnaire for Achilles tendinopathy and its correlation with imaging Robinson, Jennifer Mary Background: Because Achilles tendon disorders, which are common, have a significant morbidity among athletes, further research into efficacious treatments is necessary. Yet there is a lack of objective or quantifiable outcome measurement tools. Purpose: The purpose of this thesis was to investigate outcome measurement tools used in Achilles tendinopathy research. In particular clinical measures that quantify the severity of the patient's condition and ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging were examined. Methods: A 3-month prospective study was done. Participants: Forty five consecutive patients (27 men, 18 women; mean age 42 years, range 20-66 years) with 57 symptomatic and 33 asymptomatic Achilles tendons (mean duration 21 months, range 0.5 - 120 months) were admitted to the study. Results: The VISA-A questionnaire had construct validity. The VISA-A scores of the 45 subjects correlated significantly (p<0.01) with their scores on two other clinical severity grading systems. There was also a significant difference in scores among the 45 symptomatic subjects (mean 63.75 ± 16.81) compared to the VISA-A scores of 66 asymptomatic University students (mean 95.95 ± 7.41) (p<0.01). The test-retest reliability was 0.930, the interrater reliability was 0.903, the intrarater reliability was 0.903 and the short term reliability was 0.805. Ultrasound had a sensitivity of 0.65 and specificity of 0.67 and an overall accuracy of 0.66. The addition of colour and power doppler interrogation did not enhance the accuracy of US. MRI had a sensitivity of 0.56, a specificity of 0.94 and an overall accuracy of 0.68. At 3 month follow up 7 of the 45 patients had improved, 37 remained the same and 1 had worsened. Only the baseline VISA-A score correlated with the 3 month results (p<0.01) neither US nor MRI was able to differentiate between cases that would improve and those that would worsen. Conclusion: The VISA-A index of severity for Achilles tendon disorders offers a valid, reliable and quantifiable outcome measurement tool useful clinically and in research. Imaging lacked sensitivity and therefore not suitable as an outcome measure. Neither imaging modality proved more accurate but because of the cost and accessibility US would be preferred when imaging is required. Education, Faculty of Kinesiology, School of Graduate 2009-07-13T21:56:49Z 2009-07-13T21:56:49Z 2000 2000-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/10746 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 6432613 bytes application/pdf |
collection |
NDLTD |
language |
English |
format |
Others
|
sources |
NDLTD |
description |
Background: Because Achilles tendon disorders, which are common, have a
significant morbidity among athletes, further research into efficacious treatments is
necessary. Yet there is a lack of objective or quantifiable outcome measurement tools.
Purpose: The purpose of this thesis was to investigate outcome measurement tools
used in Achilles tendinopathy research. In particular clinical measures that quantify the
severity of the patient's condition and ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging
were examined.
Methods: A 3-month prospective study was done.
Participants: Forty five consecutive patients (27 men, 18 women; mean age 42 years,
range 20-66 years) with 57 symptomatic and 33 asymptomatic Achilles tendons (mean
duration 21 months, range 0.5 - 120 months) were admitted to the study.
Results: The VISA-A questionnaire had construct validity. The VISA-A scores of the
45 subjects correlated significantly (p<0.01) with their scores on two other clinical
severity grading systems. There was also a significant difference in scores among the
45 symptomatic subjects (mean 63.75 ± 16.81) compared to the VISA-A scores of 66
asymptomatic University students (mean 95.95 ± 7.41) (p<0.01). The test-retest
reliability was 0.930, the interrater reliability was 0.903, the intrarater reliability was
0.903 and the short term reliability was 0.805.
Ultrasound had a sensitivity of 0.65 and specificity of 0.67 and an overall accuracy of
0.66. The addition of colour and power doppler interrogation did not enhance the
accuracy of US. MRI had a sensitivity of 0.56, a specificity of 0.94 and an overall
accuracy of 0.68.
At 3 month follow up 7 of the 45 patients had improved, 37 remained the same and 1
had worsened. Only the baseline VISA-A score correlated with the 3 month results
(p<0.01) neither US nor MRI was able to differentiate between cases that would
improve and those that would worsen.
Conclusion: The VISA-A index of severity for Achilles tendon disorders offers a
valid, reliable and quantifiable outcome measurement tool useful clinically and in
research. Imaging lacked sensitivity and therefore not suitable as an outcome measure.
Neither imaging modality proved more accurate but because of the cost and
accessibility US would be preferred when imaging is required. === Education, Faculty of === Kinesiology, School of === Graduate |
author |
Robinson, Jennifer Mary |
spellingShingle |
Robinson, Jennifer Mary Assessment of the Visa-A questionnaire for Achilles tendinopathy and its correlation with imaging |
author_facet |
Robinson, Jennifer Mary |
author_sort |
Robinson, Jennifer Mary |
title |
Assessment of the Visa-A questionnaire for Achilles tendinopathy and its correlation with imaging |
title_short |
Assessment of the Visa-A questionnaire for Achilles tendinopathy and its correlation with imaging |
title_full |
Assessment of the Visa-A questionnaire for Achilles tendinopathy and its correlation with imaging |
title_fullStr |
Assessment of the Visa-A questionnaire for Achilles tendinopathy and its correlation with imaging |
title_full_unstemmed |
Assessment of the Visa-A questionnaire for Achilles tendinopathy and its correlation with imaging |
title_sort |
assessment of the visa-a questionnaire for achilles tendinopathy and its correlation with imaging |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/10746 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT robinsonjennifermary assessmentofthevisaaquestionnaireforachillestendinopathyanditscorrelationwithimaging |
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