scholarly journals Validity and Reliability of the Exercise Vital Sign Questionnaire in an Ethnically Diverse Group: A Pilot Study

2019 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 215013271984406 ◽  
Author(s):  
Norberto N. Quiles ◽  
Aston K. McCullough ◽  
Lin Piao

The purpose of this study was to determine the validity and reliability of the Exercise Vital Sign (EVS) questionnaire in an ethnically diverse sample. Participants (N = 39) were asked to wear an accelerometer at the hip for at least 7 days and to complete the EVS at the beginning (T1) and end (T2) of the wear period. The EVS questionnaire validity was determined against accelerometry, and bias was calculated as the mean difference between measures. The sensitivity and specificity of the EVS questionnaire were also evaluated. The reliability of the questionnaire was calculated using intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) between EVS responses at T1 and T2. The mean difference in EVS- and accelerometer-determined time in MVPA was 24 min/wk. The reliability for the questionnaire was excellent (ICC = 0.98). The EVS specificity and sensitivity at T2 were 56% and 78%, respectively. The EVS questionnaire may be an acceptable measure of weekly MVPA time compared to accelerometry in an ethnically diverse sample; however, further research is needed to confirm these findings.

2015 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahtab Nouri ◽  
Arash Farzan ◽  
Ali Reza Akbarzadeh Baghban ◽  
Reza Massudi

OBJECTIVE: The aim of the present study was to assess the diagnostic value of a laser scanner developed to determine the coordinates of clinical bracket points and to compare with the results of a coordinate measuring machine (CMM). METHODS: This diagnostic experimental study was conducted on maxillary and mandibular orthodontic study casts of 18 adults with normal Class I occlusion. First, the coordinates of the bracket points were measured on all casts by a CMM. Then, the three-dimensional coordinates (X, Y, Z) of the bracket points were measured on the same casts by a 3D laser scanner designed at Shahid Beheshti University, Tehran, Iran. The validity and reliability of each system were assessed by means of intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) and Dahlberg's formula. RESULTS: The difference between the mean dimension and the actual value for the CMM was 0.0066 mm. (95% CI: 69.98340, 69.99140). The mean difference for the laser scanner was 0.107 ± 0.133 mm (95% CI: -0.002, 0.24). In each method, differences were not significant. The ICC comparing the two methods was 0.998 for the X coordinate, and 0.996 for the Y coordinate; the mean difference for coordinates recorded in the entire arch and for each tooth was 0.616 mm. CONCLUSION: The accuracy of clinical bracket point coordinates measured by the laser scanner was equal to that of CMM. The mean difference in measurements was within the range of operator errors.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e12587-e12587
Author(s):  
Sidra Afzal ◽  
Asad Parvaiz ◽  
Nida Javed

e12587 Background: : Although post mastectomy Immediate breast reconstruction has shown to improve physical and psychosocial well-being of breast cancer patients, this is not a usual procedure in Pakistan due to limited resources and lack of awareness. The aim of our study is to evaluate patient’s satisfaction/ aesthetic outcomes between the patients undergoing mastectomy alone (Group A) and the ones undergoing mastectomy followed by immediate reconstruction (Group B). Methods: This is a prospective study conducted at Shaukat Khanum Hospital Pakistan comparing aesthetic outcome, patient’s satisfaction and Quality of life between two groups using Breast Q module. All patients undergoing mastectomy with and without reconstruction between April 2017 to July 2019 are included. Sample size of 84 was calculated (42 in each group). Results: The mean Q score of satisfaction with the breast in group B is 82.64 and in group A is 35.82 (P = 0.001). The mean Q score of Psychosocial well-being in group B is 89 vs 44.95 in group A (P = 0.001). The mean Q score of Physical well-being in group B is 98.23 vs 90.41 in group A (P = 0.002). The mean Q score of sexual well-being in group B is 81.93 vs 43 in Group A (P = 0.001). [Mean difference in score of 5-10 - little change, 10-20 - moderate change, > 20 - significant change].The mean difference between two groups in satisfaction with breast , psychosocial well-being and sexual well-being is more than 20 with a statistically significant p-value, while in physical well-being the mean difference is 7.8 which falls in little change group. Conclusions: Our study shows that reconstruction helps breast cancer patients in providing comprehensive care in a manner that they achieve a higher satisfaction with their appearance, psychological and sexual well-being without compromising oncological safety and this should be practiced more in our country. Also patients education about these procedures should be raised to help them fighting against this disease


Author(s):  
Parisa Heidari ◽  
Jamileh Fatahi ◽  
Reza Hoseinabadi ◽  
Nematollah Rouhbakhsh ◽  
Sasan Dabiri Satri ◽  
...  

Background and Aim: Investigations have shown that the patient’s attitudes toward hearing loss and hearing aids impact hearing aid benefits and its use. In this regard, Saunders and Cien­kowski (1996) developed the “attitudes towards loss of hearing questionnaire” to examine some of the psychosocial factors underlying the use of hearing aids. This study has focused on pre­paring a Persian version of this questionnaire and analyzing its validity and reliability. Methods: The original English version of the questionnaire was translated into Persian, and its content and face validities were determined by related experts. The final questionnaire was administered to 100 hearing impaired people (52 males and 48 females) aged 30 to 65 years with the mean (SD) age of 54.54 (12.05) years. The test-retest reliability was assessed in 20 pat­ients. Results: The results of face validity assessment revealed that our questionnaire has a high quality in translation, intelligibility, and cultural compatibility. The mean scores of the content validity ratio and content validity index of this questionnaire was 0.71 and 0.98, respectively. The mean (SD) total score of this questionnaire was 60.46 (10.02) and the mean scores of denial of hearing loss, negative associations, negative coping strategies, manual dexterity and vision and hearing-related esteem were 15.58, 12.10, 20.40, 5.30, and 7.08, respectively. The overall Cronbach α value was 0.798. The test-retest reliability showed good results for the global score (Intraclass correlation = 0.989). Conclusion: Based on the obtained results, the Persian version of the questionnaire possesses satisfactory validity and reliability.


Author(s):  
R. Niveda ◽  
Gurumoorthy Kaarthikeyan

The aim of the current study is to compare the effect of oxygen releasing oral gel and chlorhexidine gel in the treatment of periodontitis and the objective was to assess and compare the changes in clinical parameters such as Probing pocket depth, Bleeding on probing, Clinical attachment levels between oxygen releasing oral gel and chlorhexidine gel. The current pilot study which compares oxygen releasing gel with chlorhexidine gel is a randomised split mouth clinical trial .All the patients included in the study were patients with moderate to severe periodontitis with no systemic diseases, not under any medication non smoking healthy patients. All the patients received supra and sub gingival scaling, pockets on molars with deeper probing depth on either maxillary or mandibular arch and the medication to be received by the patient were allotted randomly. Randomisation was performed using lot method.Oxygen releasing (Blue M gel) and chlorhexidine gel (Hexigel) was applied at the chosen site, patient was recalled for re application and was reassessed  for clinical parameters Paired t test was done to compare the mean difference in probing depth in Blue M gel group and Hexigel group. The mean probing depth at the day of drug delivery was for Blue M gel group was 7.2 mm SD+/-0.42 mm and the mean probing depth six week after drug delivery was 4.7 SD+/- 0.57 mm with a significant p value of 0.42. The mean probing depth at the day of drug delivery was for Hexigel gel group was 7.0 mm SD+/-0.57 mm and the mean probing depth six week after drug delivery was 5.7 SD+/- 0.64 mm. Within the limitations of the study from the results it is seen that there is a significant difference in reduction in probing pocket depth. The mean difference between the  probing depth reduction in group A (Blue M ) from baseline to 6 week was 2.3 and The mean difference probing depth reduction in group B  (Hexigel ) from baseline to 6 week was 1.5. Group A showed better potential in probing depth reduction. It emphasises the fact that thorough sub gingival scaling and root planing along with adjuvant topical oxygen therapy aid in reducing the periodontal pockets further research has to be done to assess the effect of oxygen delivering agents in future.


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (31_suppl) ◽  
pp. 211-211
Author(s):  
Su-Jin Koh ◽  
So Yeon Oh ◽  
Ji Yeon Baek ◽  
Kyung A. Kwon ◽  
Hei-Cheul Jeung ◽  
...  

211 Background: Malnutrition and a loss of muscle mass are frequent in cancer patients and have a negative effect on clinical outcome. Nutrition risk screening aims to increase awareness and allow early recognition and treatment of cancer cachexia. Therefore, screenings should be brief, inexpensive, highly sensitive, and have good specificity. SNAQ is a simple screening tool including 4 questions, and validated to predict weight loss within 6 months in community-dwelling adults and nursing home residents. Our study aimed to translate the SNAQ into Korean, and to assess the validity and reliability of the translated screening tool in advanced cancer patients. Methods: The SNAQ was translated into Korean according to linguistic validation. The internal consistency of the SNAQ was evaluated by Cronbach’s alpha coefficient. Test–retest reliability was evaluated using the intraclass correlation coefficient. Concurrent validity was evaluated by measuring the Pearson’s correlation coefficient between the SNAQ and Mini-Nutritional Assessment (MNA) and Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment (PG-SGA). Results: In the 194 patients included in full analysis set, cancer stage was predominantly (98.5%) metastatic, the mean age was 60 years, and the mean BMI was 24 kg/m2. According to MNA score ≤11, 57 patients (29.3%) were malnourished. The mean score of the Korean version of the SNAQ was 13.8 (SD = 2.5) with a range of 6–19. Cronbach’s alpha coefficient was 0.74, and intraclass correlation coefficient was 0.87. The SNAQ was moderately correlated with MNA(r = 0.4043, p < 0.0001) and PG-SGA(r = -0.5297, p < 0.0001). A significant weight loss of 5% of the original body weight within 6 months occurred in 46 (24.7%) of the 186 patients. SNAQ score ≤14 predicted 5% weight loss with a sensitivity of 56.5% and a specificity of 44.3%. Conclusions: The Korean version of the SNAQ had high validity and reliability. SNAQ is useful for the screening tool for advanced cancer patients. The SNAQ had a limitation to predict impending weight loss in advanced cancer patients.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Prakasit Sanguanjit ◽  
Adinun Apivatgaroon ◽  
Phanuwat Boonsun ◽  
Surasak Srimongkolpi ◽  
Bancha C้hernchujit

Abstract Background: Acromiohumeral interval (AHI) is a measurement method to determine the superior migration of the humeral head in patients with rotator cuff tears.Hypothesis/Purpose: The purpose of this study was to compare the AHI measurement in supine shoulder and upright shoulder radiographs, as well as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), as well as to report the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy in detecting full thickness rotator cuff tears.Study Design: Diagnostic study.Methods: From July 2020 to May 2021, evaluation of 86 shoulder radiographs in both supine & upright Grashey views compared with the MRI of the affected shoulder. Measurements of the AHI obtained from both radiographs and MRIs was determined by two independent orthopaedic surgeons. The intraclass correlation of the AHI measurement was tested. The difference between the AHI in each view was determined.Result: The 86 shoulders were divided into 3 groups that included; 1) non-full thickness tear (50%), 2) full thickness (FT) tear 3 cm (33.7%), and 3) FT tear > 3 cm (16.3%). The mean difference of AHI noted was significantly lower in the supine radiographs than with the upright (1.34-1.37 mm.). The mean difference of the AHI was significantly lower in the MRI than the upright (1.62-1.87 mm.). AHI obtained from the supine radiographs and MRI had no significant differences. The area under the curve (AUC) of the upright and supine AHI in the diagnosis of the FT tears were at 0.649 and 0.642 accuracy. Upright AHI 7.09 mm. had 27.9% sensitivity and 100% specificity in diagnosing FT tears with 64% accuracy (p<0.001). The upright AHI cut off value of 9.52 mm. had 60.5% sensitivity, 67.4% specificity, and 64% accuracy (p=0.01). The supine AHI 6.56 mm. had 32.6% sensitivity, 100.0% specificity, and 66.3% accuracy (p<0.01). Supine AHI cut off value of 7.42 mm. had 41.9% sensitivity, 86.0% specificity, and 64.0% accuracy (p=0.004). The inter- and intra-rater reliability of AHI measurement in 3 views were of substantial to almost perfect agreement (0.668-0.824).Conclusion: The AHI in supine radiographs were significantly lower than upright shoulder radiographs in all groups as divided by severity of the rotator cuff tear and was comparable with the MRI. For AHI ≤ 7 mm. in upright shoulder radiographs remains as a good diagnostic test of full thickness rotator cuff tears, while this value was not relevant for use as the cut point in the supine radiographs and MRI shoulders.Level of evidence: Level III; Diagnostic studyClinical Relevance: The AHI measurement in supine and upright radiographs are reliable and reproducible. The AHI ≤ 7 mm. in upright shoulder radiographs remains as a good diagnostic test of full thickness rotator cuff tears, while this value was not relevant for use as the cut point in the supine radiographs and MRI shoulders.


1932 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-5
Author(s):  
W. F. Sheppard

Formulae of interpolation in terms of given central differences might be regarded as falling into two groups, A and B. In group A, the simplest cases are those in which each given difference is one of the two which in the difference table lie nearest to the preceding given difference; the differences are all natural differences (i.e., are not mean differences), and are all expressed in the centraldifference notation. Any such formula can be a central-difference formula for a certain range of the variable: but that is a matter with which we are only incidentally concerned. What I have to do is to examine the formula as determined by the series of differences given. I have then to see how the formula is affected when an ordinary difference is replaced by a mean difference. This brings us to group B, which comprises two formulae only: the Newton-Stirling formula, which expresses the required quantity in terms of a tabulated value and its central differences; and the Newton-Bessel formula, which expresses it in terms of the mean of two tabulated values and the central differences of this mean.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Vrijsen ◽  
C. L. van Erpecum ◽  
S. E. de Rooij ◽  
J. Niebuur ◽  
N. Smidt

Abstract Background The Ruff Figural Fluency Test (RFFT) is a valid but time-consuming and labour-intensive cognitive paper-and-pencil test. A digital RFFT was developed that can be conducted independently using an iPad and Apple Pencil and RFFT scores are computed automatically. We investigated the validity and reliability of this digital RFFT. Methods We randomly allocated participants to the digital or paper-and-pencil RFFT. After the first test, the other test was performed immediately (cross-over). Participants were invited for a second digital RFFT 1 week later. For the digital RFFT, an (automatic) algorithm and two independent raters (criterion standard) assessed the number of unique designs (UD) and perseverative errors (PE). These raters also assessed the paper-and-pencil RFFT. We used Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC), sensitivity, specificity, %-agreement, Kappa, and Bland–Altman plots. Results We included 94 participants (mean (SD) age 39.9 (14.8), 73.4% follow-up). Mean (SD) UD and median (IQR) PE of the digital RFFT were 84.2 (26.0) and 4 (2–7.3), respectively. Agreement between manual and automatic scoring of the digital RFFT was high for UD (ICC = 0.99, 95% CI 0.98, 0.99, sensitivity = 0.98; specificity = 0.96) and PE (ICC = 0.99, 95% CI 0.98, 0.99; sensitivity = 0.90, specificity = 1.00), indicating excellent criterion validity. Small but significant differences in UD were found between the automatic and manual scoring (mean difference: − 1.12, 95% CI − 1.92, − 0.33). Digital and paper-and-pencil RFFT had moderate agreement for UD (ICC = 0.73, 95% CI 0.34, 0.87) and poor agreement for PE (ICC = 0.47, 95% CI 0.30, 0.62). Participants had fewer UD on the digital than paper-and-pencil RFFT (mean difference: − 7.09, 95% CI − 11.80, − 2.38). The number of UD on the digital RFFT was associated with higher education (Spearman’s r = 0.43, p < 0.001), and younger age (Pearson’s r = − 0.36, p < 0.001), showing its ability to discriminate between different age categories and levels of education. Test–retest reliability was moderate (ICC = 0.74, 95% CI 0.61, 0.83). Conclusions The automatic scoring of the digital RFFT has good criterion and convergent validity. There was low agreement between the digital RFFT and paper-and-pencil RFFT and moderate test–retest reliability, which can be explained by learning effects. The digital RFFT is a valid and reliable instrument to measure executive cognitive function among the general population and is a feasible alternative to the paper-and-pencil RFFT in large-scale studies. However, its scores cannot be used interchangeably with the paper-and-pencil RFFT scores.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Grant Abt ◽  
James Bray ◽  
Amanda Clare Benson

BACKGROUND Moderate fitness levels and habitual exercise have a protective effect for cardiovascular disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes, and all-cause mortality. The Apple Watch displays exercise completed at an intensity of a brisk walk or above using a green “exercise” ring. However, it is unknown if the exercise ring accurately represents an exercise intensity comparable to that defined as moderate-intensity. In order for health professionals to prescribe exercise intensity with confidence, consumer wearable devices need to be accurate and precise if they are to be used as part of a personalized medicine approach to disease management. OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to examine the validity and reliability of the Apple Watch for measuring moderate-intensity exercise, as defined as 40-59% oxygen consumption reserve (VO2R). METHODS Twenty recreationally active participants completed resting oxygen consumption (VO2rest) and maximal oxygen consumption (VO2 max) tests prior to a series of 5-minute bouts of treadmill walking at increasing speed while wearing an Apple Watch on both wrists, and with oxygen consumption measured continuously. Five-minute exercise bouts were added until the Apple Watch advanced the green “exercise” ring by 5 minutes (defined as the treadmill inflection speed). Validity was examined using a one-sample t-test, with interdevice and intradevice reliability reported as the standardized typical error and intraclass correlation. RESULTS The mean %VO2R at the treadmill inflection speed was 30% (SD 7) for both Apple Watches. There was a large underestimation of moderate-intensity exercise (left hand: mean difference = -10% [95% CI -14 to -7], d=-1.4; right hand: mean difference = -10% [95% CI -13 to -7], d=-1.5) when compared to the criterion of 40% VO2R. Standardized typical errors for %VO2R at the treadmill inflection speed were small to moderate, with intraclass correlations higher within trials compared to between trials. CONCLUSIONS The Apple Watch threshold for moderate-intensity exercise was lower than the criterion, which would lead to an overestimation of moderate-intensity exercise minutes completed throughout the day.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
peng su ◽  
nengri jian ◽  
Beini Mao ◽  
zhong zhang ◽  
Jian Li ◽  
...  

Abstract BackgroundThe radiological indicators can help doctors determine whether to make the tibial tubercle transfer. But that which indicator is better is still in question.Methods117 knees in 103 patients who had gone through patellar surgery and 60 knees in 58 patients who had no history of patellar dislocation from 2014 to 2019 were analyzed. Significant differences of tibial tubercle–trochlear groove (TT-TG) on CT and tibial tubercle–posterior cruciate ligament (TT-PCL) on MRI between the case group and the control group were estimated by an unpaired t test. Significant differences between TT-TG on CT and TT-TG on MRI were estimated by a paired t test. The correlation between TT-PCL on MRI and tibial width was estimated by Pearson test. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves and the area under the ROC curve (AUC) were measured to assess the diagnostic accuracy of TT-TG and TT-PCL on MRI. ResultsThe intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for inter-method of TT-TG evaluated by two raters was were 0.566. When comparing TT-TG on CT with that on MRI, the mean difference was 2.5mm (p<0.001). The mean TT-TG difference on CT between the case group and the control group was 5.3 mm, which was significantly bigger than the mean TT-PCL difference on MRI of 1.2mm(p<0.001). AUC of TT-TG on CT and TT-PCL were 0.838 and 0.580 (P<0.001). TT-PCL correlated with tibial width (r=0.450, P<0.001). ConclusionA statistically significance and a fair ICC proved that TT-TG could not be used interchangeably. The bigger mean difference between the case group and the control group and better AUC proved that TT-TG on CT might be an indicator more suitable for measuring the lateralization of the tibial tubercle. And TT-TG should be considered as an individual parameter because of the significant correlation with tibial width.


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