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Identifiers Suggestive of Clinical Cervical Spine Instability: A Delphi Study of Physical Therapists
Author(s) -
Chad Cook,
JeanMichel Brismée,
Robert J. Fleming,
Phillip S. Sizer
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
physical therapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.998
H-Index - 150
eISSN - 1538-6724
pISSN - 0031-9023
DOI - 10.1093/ptj/85.9.895
Subject(s) - physical examination , shoulders , medicine , physical therapy , physical medicine and rehabilitation , cervical spine , delphi method , range of motion , manual therapy , alternative medicine , surgery , statistics , mathematics , pathology
Background and Purpose Clinical cervical spine instability (CCSI) is controversial and difficult to diagnose. Within the literature, no clinical or diagnostic tests that yield valid and reliable results have been described to differentially diagnose this condition. The purpose of this study was to attempt to obtain consensus on symptoms and physical examination findings that are associated with CCSI. Subjects One hundred seventy-two physical therapists who were Orthopaedic Certified Specialists (OCS) or Fellows of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Manual Physical Therapists (FAAOMPT) participated in the survey. Methods This study was a 3-round Delphi survey designed to obtain consensual symptoms and physical examination findings for CCSI. Results The symptoms that reached the highest consensus among respondents were “intolerance to prolonged static postures,” “fatigue and inability to hold head up,” “better with external support, including hands or collar,” “frequent need for self-manipulation,” “feeling of instability, shaking, or lack of control,” “frequent episodes of acute attacks,” and “sharp pain, possibly with sudden movements.” The physical examination findings related to cervical instability that reached the highest consensus among respondents included “poor coordination/neuromuscular control, including poor recruitment and dissociation of cervical segments with movement,” “abnormal joint play,” “motion that is not smooth throughout range (of motion), including segmental hinging, pivoting, or fulcruming,” and “aberrant movement.” Discussion and Conclusion The Delphi method is useful in situations where clinical judgments are encountered but empirical evidence to provide evidence-based decision making does not exist. Findings of this study may provide beneficial clinical information, specifically when the identifiers are clustered together, because no set of clinical examination and symptom standards for CCSI currently exists. Diagnosis of CCSI is challenging; therefore, appropriate clinical reasoning is required for distinctive physical therapy assessment using pertinent symptoms and physical examination findings.

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