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Pregnancy-related pelvic girdle pain: intertester reliability of 3 tests to determine asymmetric mobility of the sacroiliac joints

Journal: Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics Date: 2008/02, 31(2):Pages: 130-136. doi: Subito , type of study: clinical trial

Free full text   (https://www.jmptonline.org/article/S0161-4754(07)00336-3/fulltext)

Keywords:

diagnostic techniques and procedures [3]
female [379]
pelvic pain [58]
physical examination [39]
pregnancy [142]
pregnancy complications [11]
range of motion [80]
reproducibility of results [16]
sacroiliac joint [59]

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE: Several tests have been developed to determine the extent of sacroiliac asymmetry during pregnancy-related pelvic girdle pain (PGP). This blinded control study investigated the intertester reliability of 3 such tests used in PGP. METHODS: A total of 62 women (ages 20-40 years) were recruited from regional obstetric practices and subsequently divided into 3 groups: (1) 20 women without PGP who were pregnant for more than 20 weeks, (2) 22 women with PGP who were pregnant for more than 20 weeks, and (3) a control group of 20 women who were not pregnant and had no back pain or PGP. All tests were performed by 2 physiotherapists independently of each other and blinded to each other's results. The 3 tests were the thumb-posterior superior iliac spines test, the heel-bank test, and the abduction test. RESULTS: To determine the level of agreement between the 2 testers, kappa values were calculated. The overall kappa is 0.30 (range, -0.22 to 0.83), which is considered as a poor agreement. The percentage agreement per test/category ranged from 45% to 95%. CONCLUSION: This study of 3 tests used to determine asymmetry of the sacroiliac joints in women with pregnancy-related PGP showed them to have a poor intertester reliability.


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