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Spine biomechanical testing methodologies: The controversy of consensus vs scientific evidence
Author(s) -
Costi John J.,
Ledet Eric H.,
O'Connell Grace D.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
jor spine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.125
0
ISSN - 2572-1143
DOI - 10.1002/jsp2.1138
Subject(s) - compendium , scientific evidence , evidence based medicine , computer science , scientific literature , psychology , medical physics , data science , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology , biology , mathematics , geography , statistics , paleontology , archaeology
Biomechanical testing methodologies for the spine have developed over the past 50 years. During that time, there have been several paradigm shifts with respect to techniques. These techniques evolved by incorporating state‐of‐the‐art engineering principles, in vivo measurements, anatomical structure‐function relationships, and the scientific method. Multiple parametric studies have focused on the effects that the experimental technique has on outcomes. As a result, testing methodologies have evolved, but there are no standard testing protocols, which makes the comparison of findings between experiments difficult and conclusions about in vivo performance challenging. In 2019, the international spine research community was surveyed to determine the consensus on spine biomechanical testing and if the consensus opinion was consistent with the scientific evidence. More than 80 responses to the survey were received. The findings of this survey confirmed that while some methods have been commonly adopted, not all are consistent with the scientific evidence. This review summarizes the scientific literature, the current consensus, and the authors' recommendations on best practices based on the compendium of available evidence.

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