Development of a New Activity Score for the Evaluation of Ankle Instability
Background: Tegner and Lysholm described their generally acknowledged activity score in 1985. It was originally tested for knee ligament injuries, but for the past 17 years it has been used for other joint evaluations as well. The development of already existing and new kinds of sports, differences...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of sports medicine 2004-06, Vol.32 (4), p.899-908 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background: Tegner and Lysholm described their generally acknowledged activity score in 1985. It was originally tested for knee ligament
injuries, but for the past 17 years it has been used for other joint evaluations as well. The development of already existing
and new kinds of sports, differences between knee and ankle loading, and different injury rates provided reasons for developing
an ankle-specific activity score.
Hypothesis: The new score should have a higher reliability, validity, and sensitivity than the Tegner score when evaluating ankle-related
activity changes.
Study Design: Methodological study.
Methods: Fifty-three sports, 3 working activities, and 4 general activities were inserted into a 0-to-10 category system based on
the rankings of a 7 Ã 2âpoint pre-evaluation system, followed by a direct comparison with the Tegner score and reliability,
validity, and sensitivity testing on 2 different patient populations.
Results: In direct comparison, there is a strong overall correlation of the 2 activity-scoring systems ( r = 0.7565), but the ankle activity score proved to be different from the Tegner score in the higher categories, especially
in the top 4 ankle score categories ( r = 0.1450). Further tests demonstrated the high reliability (1.00) of the new score. Analysis of variance proved that activity
changes measured by the ankle score correspond well to the difference between the patientsâ subjective results and their Karlsson
functional scores ( P = .0119). This is not the case when we measure ankle activity changes using the knee-specific Tegner score ( P = .0987). Furthermore, ankle score differences spread over a wider range (â1.18 ± 2.12) than did Tegner score differences
(â0.68 ± 1.29), which demonstrates the higher sensitivity of the new score.
Conclusions: Based on these results, the new ankle activity score could be a better complement in the complex evaluation of ankle instability.
Keywords:
activity score
ankle
sport
instability
Tegner score |
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ISSN: | 0363-5465 1552-3365 |
DOI: | 10.1177/0363546503262181 |