Published May 29, 2024
| Version v1
Publication
Clinical value of questionnaires & physical tests for patellofemoral pain: Validity, reliability and predictive capacity
Description
Objectives
Todetermine the most appropriate method of functional assessment for "patellofemoral
pain" (PFP)/"chondromalacia patella" for its diagnostic value, (validity, reliability, sensitivity,
specificity, predictive value and clinical applicability); to outline initial interpretations of the
questionnaires and their appropriateness, through the cut-off points determined in their
scores based on physical test and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI); to establish which
methods should be used in conjunction with each other to obtain clinical diagnoses that are
robust effective and efficient.
Methods
(1)Intra- and inter-observer reliability and of the relationship among PFP questionnaires/
physical tests validated. (2)Predictive capacity of the questionnaires. Subject: 113 knees
with PFP, assessed using "Knee-injury-and-Osteoarthritis Outcome-Score-for-Patellofe
moral-pain-and-osteoarthritis" (KOOS-PF), "Kujala-Patellofemoral-Score" (KPS), "Victo
rian-Institute-of-Sports-Assessment-for-Patellar-tendons-questionnaire" (VISA-P), and the
physical tests: "patellar-palpation", "patellar-tilt", "patellar-apprehension", "Clarke" and
"squat".
Results
Questionnaires correlations themselves was 0.78<r<0.86. Tests intra-rater reliability was
"excellent". Squat inter-rater reliability was "excellent"/"good". Palpation, tilt, Clarke and
squat showed astatistically significant relationship (p<0.05) with all questionnaires/specific
items. AUC of the questionnaires showed a "useful" accuracy, except for Tilt. No statistically
significant differences were found between grades 0 and 1 chondromalacia (by MRI) knee
scores, but between 1 and �2.AUCofthequestionnaires showed "useful" accuracy.
Conclusions
KOOS-PF,KPSandVISA-Pdemonstratedtheirdiagnostic value in PFP/chondromalacia
(validity, reliability, sensitivity, specificity, predictive value and clinical applicability). KOOS
PFwasthemostversatile, and the most appropriate in mild cases and for early detection
andprevention. Squat was the best due to its reliability and clinical relationship with the
questionnaires, which predicted it correctly. The functional assessment tools discussed
should be applied by combining them with each other.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://idus.us.es/handle//11441/159457
- URN
- urn:oai:idus.us.es:11441/159457
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- USE