The internal rotation and shift-test for the detection of superior lesions of the rotator cuff: reliability and clinical performance
Author | Georg, Fieseler |
Author | Laudner, Kevin |
Author | Sendler, Julia |
Author | Cornelius, Jakob |
Author | Schulze, Stephan |
Author | Lehmann, Wolfgang |
Author | Hermassi, Souhail |
Author | Delank, Karl-Stefan |
Author | Schwesig, René |
Available date | 2024-09-24T10:01:38Z |
Publication Date | 2022-05-31 |
Publication Name | JSES International |
Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jseint.2022.01.011 |
Citation | Fieseler, G., Laudner, K., Sendler, J., Cornelius, J., Schulze, S., Lehmann, W., ... & Schwesig, R. (2022). The internal rotation and shift-test for the detection of superior lesions of the rotator cuff: Reliability and clinical performance. JSES international, 6(3), 495-499. |
ISSN | 26666383 |
Abstract | BackgroundUsing reliable and valid clinical tests are essential for proper diagnosis and clinical outcomes among injuries involving the rotator cuff. The addition of a new clinical examination test could improve the clinical diagnosis and informative value of the sensitivity and specificity of pathology. This study of diagnostic accuracy evaluated the use of a new rotator cuff test, called the internal rotation and shift-test (IRO/shift-test), to determine its reliability and clinical performance (sensitivity, specificity, positive (PPV)/negative predictive value (NPV)). Clinical diagnostic outcomes were confirmed with radiological findings (MRI). Methods100 patients from a specialized shoulder unit participated (64 male, 36 female, mean age: 55 ± 13.5 years). A single-blinded (no knowledge of prior clinical or technical diagnostics) study design was used with two experienced physicians performing the IRO/shift-test. For clinical performance, all clinical testing was compared with MRI. ResultsThe intra-rater (ICC = 0.73, 95% CI: 60-82) and inter-rater (ICC = 0.89, 95% CI: 81-94) coefficients for the IRO/shift-test showed good-to-excellent reliability. 75% of the patients showed a positive IRO/shift-test, while 65% had a radiologically diagnosed superior rotator cuff tear. 60% of these patients had both a positive IRO/shift-test and objective rotator cuff tear via MRI. The sensitivity of the IRO/shift-test to detect superior rotator cuff lesions based on MRI diagnosis was calculated at 92% (95% CI: 86-99%), while specificity was 67% (95% CI: 50-84%). Predictive values were also found to be high with 86% PPV (95% CI: 78-94%) and 80% NPV (95% CI: 64-96%). ConclusionOur results demonstrate that the IRO/shift-test is a reliable and valid tool for assessing superior rotator cuff pathology. With good-to-excellent intrarater and inter-rater reliability and strong sensitivity and specificity this test should be considered a valuable addition to clinicians’ cadre of clinical evaluation tools. |
Language | en |
Publisher | Elsevier B.V. |
Subject | Clinical test Orthopedic exam Shoulder Rotator cuff Validity Reliability |
Type | Article |
Pagination | 495-499 |
Issue Number | 3 |
Volume Number | 6 |
Open Access user License | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
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Physical Education [131 items ]