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Ultrasound transducer shape has no effect on measurements of lumbar multifidus muscle size

Ultrasound transducer shape has no effect on measurements of lumbar multifidus muscle size
Ultrasound transducer shape has no effect on measurements of lumbar multifidus muscle size
Objective: Evidence is currently lacking for guidance on ultrasound transducer configuration (shape) when imaging muscle to measure its size. This study compared measurements made of lumbar multifidus on images obtained using curvilinear and linear transducers.

Method: Fifteen asymptomatic males (aged 21–32 years) had their right lumbar multifidus imaged at L3. Two transverse images were taken with two transducers (5 MHz curvilinear and 6 MHz linear), and linear and cross-sectional area (CSA) measurements were made off-line. Reliability of image interpretation was shown using intra-class correlation coefficients (0.78–0.99). Muscle measurements were compared between transducers using Bland and Altman plots and paired t-tests. Relationships between CSA and linear measurements were examined using Pearson's Correlation Coefficients.

Results: There were no significant differences (p > 0.05) in the measurements of the two transducers. Thickness and CSA measurements had small differences between transducers, with mean differences of 0.01 cm (SDdiff = 0.21 cm) and 0.03 cm2 (SDdiff = 0.58 cm2) respectively. Width measures had a mean difference of 0.14 cm, with the linear transducer giving larger measures. Significant correlations (p < 0.001) were found between all linear measures and CSA, with both transducers (r = 0.78–0.89).

Conclusion: Measurements of multifidus at L3 were not influenced by the configuration of transducers of similar frequency. For the purposes of image interpretation, the curvilinear transducer produced better definition of the lateral muscle border, suggesting it as the preferable transducer for imaging lumbar multifidus.

rehabilitative ultrasound imaging, lumbar multifidus, transducer shape, reliability
1356-689X
Worsley, Peter
6d33aee3-ef43-468d-aef6-86d190de6756
Smith, Nick
c2bbd7f3-95f5-4c28-921a-c6db88764b05
Warner, Martin
f4dce73d-fb87-4f71-a3f0-078123aa040c
Stokes, Maria
71730503-70ce-4e67-b7ea-a3e54579717f
Worsley, Peter
6d33aee3-ef43-468d-aef6-86d190de6756
Smith, Nick
c2bbd7f3-95f5-4c28-921a-c6db88764b05
Warner, Martin
f4dce73d-fb87-4f71-a3f0-078123aa040c
Stokes, Maria
71730503-70ce-4e67-b7ea-a3e54579717f

Worsley, Peter, Smith, Nick, Warner, Martin and Stokes, Maria (2011) Ultrasound transducer shape has no effect on measurements of lumbar multifidus muscle size. Manual Therapy. (doi:10.1016/j.math.2011.07.001). (PMID:21813312)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: Evidence is currently lacking for guidance on ultrasound transducer configuration (shape) when imaging muscle to measure its size. This study compared measurements made of lumbar multifidus on images obtained using curvilinear and linear transducers.

Method: Fifteen asymptomatic males (aged 21–32 years) had their right lumbar multifidus imaged at L3. Two transverse images were taken with two transducers (5 MHz curvilinear and 6 MHz linear), and linear and cross-sectional area (CSA) measurements were made off-line. Reliability of image interpretation was shown using intra-class correlation coefficients (0.78–0.99). Muscle measurements were compared between transducers using Bland and Altman plots and paired t-tests. Relationships between CSA and linear measurements were examined using Pearson's Correlation Coefficients.

Results: There were no significant differences (p > 0.05) in the measurements of the two transducers. Thickness and CSA measurements had small differences between transducers, with mean differences of 0.01 cm (SDdiff = 0.21 cm) and 0.03 cm2 (SDdiff = 0.58 cm2) respectively. Width measures had a mean difference of 0.14 cm, with the linear transducer giving larger measures. Significant correlations (p < 0.001) were found between all linear measures and CSA, with both transducers (r = 0.78–0.89).

Conclusion: Measurements of multifidus at L3 were not influenced by the configuration of transducers of similar frequency. For the purposes of image interpretation, the curvilinear transducer produced better definition of the lateral muscle border, suggesting it as the preferable transducer for imaging lumbar multifidus.

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Published date: 3 August 2011
Keywords: rehabilitative ultrasound imaging, lumbar multifidus, transducer shape, reliability
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 195915
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/195915
ISSN: 1356-689X
PURE UUID: d6dfa111-4b67-483c-a33b-1da40da52c63
ORCID for Peter Worsley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0145-5042
ORCID for Martin Warner: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1483-0561
ORCID for Maria Stokes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4204-0890

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Date deposited: 31 Aug 2011 08:56
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:31

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Contributors

Author: Peter Worsley ORCID iD
Author: Nick Smith
Author: Martin Warner ORCID iD
Author: Maria Stokes ORCID iD

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