Reliability of the measurement of glenoid bone defect in anterior shoulder instability

Abstract. Background:. The size of the glenoid bone defect is an important index in selecting the appropriate treatment for anterior shoulder instability. However, the reliability of glenoid bone defect measurement is controversial. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the reliabiliti...

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Main Authors: Yong-Gang Wu, Hai-Long Zhang, Ya-Fei Hao, Chun-Yan Jiang, Li-Shao Guo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer 2019-11-01
Series:Chinese Medical Journal
Online Access:http://journals.lww.com/10.1097/CM9.0000000000000481
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spelling doaj-6ad089cd2747459babb6285790e8a4c42020-12-02T07:52:51ZengWolters KluwerChinese Medical Journal0366-69992542-56412019-11-01132212559256410.1097/CM9.0000000000000481201911050-00006Reliability of the measurement of glenoid bone defect in anterior shoulder instabilityYong-Gang Wu0Hai-Long Zhang1Ya-Fei Hao2Chun-Yan Jiang3Li-Shao Guo4Department of Sports Medicine, Peking University Fourth School of Clinical Medicine, Beijing 100035, China.Department of Sports Medicine, Peking University Fourth School of Clinical Medicine, Beijing 100035, China.Department of Sports Medicine, Peking University Fourth School of Clinical Medicine, Beijing 100035, China.Department of Sports Medicine, Peking University Fourth School of Clinical Medicine, Beijing 100035, China.Department of Sports Medicine, Peking University Fourth School of Clinical Medicine, Beijing 100035, China.Abstract. Background:. The size of the glenoid bone defect is an important index in selecting the appropriate treatment for anterior shoulder instability. However, the reliability of glenoid bone defect measurement is controversial. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the reliabilities of measurements of the glenoid bone defect on computed tomography and to explore the predisposing factors leading to inconsistency of these measurements. Methods:. The study population comprised 69 consecutive patients who underwent surgery for recurrent anterior shoulder dislocation in Peking University Fourth School of Clinical Medicine from March 2016 to January 2017. The glenoid bone defect was measured by three surgeons on ‘self-confirmed’ and ‘designated’ 3-D en-face views, and repeated after an interval of 3 months. Measurements included the ratio of the defect area to the best-fit circle area, and the ratio of the defect width to the diameter of the best-fit circle. The inter- and intra-observer reliabilities of the measurements were evaluated using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs). The maximum absolute inter- and intra-observer differences and the cumulative percentages of cases with inter- and intra-observer differences greater than these respective levels were calculated. Results:. Almost all linear defect values were bigger than the areal defect values. The inter-observer ICCs for the areal defect were 0.557 and 0.513 in the ‘self-confirmed’ group and 0.549 and 0.431 in the ‘designated’ group. The inter-observer reliabilities for the linear defect were moderate or fair in the ‘self-confirmed’ group (ICC = 0.446, 0.374) and ‘designated’ group (ICC = 0.402, 0.327). The ICCs for intra-observer measurements were higher than those for inter-observer measurements. The respective maximum inter- and intra-observer absolute differences were 13.9% and 13.2% in the ‘self-confirmed’ group, and 15.8% and 9.8% in the ‘designated’ group. Conclusions:. The areal measurement of the glenoid bone defect is more reliable than the linear measurement. The reliability of the glenoid defect areal measurement is moderate or worse, suggesting that a more accurate and objective measurement method is needed in both en-face view and best-fit circle determination. Subjective factors affecting the glenoid bone loss measurement should be minimized.http://journals.lww.com/10.1097/CM9.0000000000000481
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yong-Gang Wu
Hai-Long Zhang
Ya-Fei Hao
Chun-Yan Jiang
Li-Shao Guo
spellingShingle Yong-Gang Wu
Hai-Long Zhang
Ya-Fei Hao
Chun-Yan Jiang
Li-Shao Guo
Reliability of the measurement of glenoid bone defect in anterior shoulder instability
Chinese Medical Journal
author_facet Yong-Gang Wu
Hai-Long Zhang
Ya-Fei Hao
Chun-Yan Jiang
Li-Shao Guo
author_sort Yong-Gang Wu
title Reliability of the measurement of glenoid bone defect in anterior shoulder instability
title_short Reliability of the measurement of glenoid bone defect in anterior shoulder instability
title_full Reliability of the measurement of glenoid bone defect in anterior shoulder instability
title_fullStr Reliability of the measurement of glenoid bone defect in anterior shoulder instability
title_full_unstemmed Reliability of the measurement of glenoid bone defect in anterior shoulder instability
title_sort reliability of the measurement of glenoid bone defect in anterior shoulder instability
publisher Wolters Kluwer
series Chinese Medical Journal
issn 0366-6999
2542-5641
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Abstract. Background:. The size of the glenoid bone defect is an important index in selecting the appropriate treatment for anterior shoulder instability. However, the reliability of glenoid bone defect measurement is controversial. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the reliabilities of measurements of the glenoid bone defect on computed tomography and to explore the predisposing factors leading to inconsistency of these measurements. Methods:. The study population comprised 69 consecutive patients who underwent surgery for recurrent anterior shoulder dislocation in Peking University Fourth School of Clinical Medicine from March 2016 to January 2017. The glenoid bone defect was measured by three surgeons on ‘self-confirmed’ and ‘designated’ 3-D en-face views, and repeated after an interval of 3 months. Measurements included the ratio of the defect area to the best-fit circle area, and the ratio of the defect width to the diameter of the best-fit circle. The inter- and intra-observer reliabilities of the measurements were evaluated using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs). The maximum absolute inter- and intra-observer differences and the cumulative percentages of cases with inter- and intra-observer differences greater than these respective levels were calculated. Results:. Almost all linear defect values were bigger than the areal defect values. The inter-observer ICCs for the areal defect were 0.557 and 0.513 in the ‘self-confirmed’ group and 0.549 and 0.431 in the ‘designated’ group. The inter-observer reliabilities for the linear defect were moderate or fair in the ‘self-confirmed’ group (ICC = 0.446, 0.374) and ‘designated’ group (ICC = 0.402, 0.327). The ICCs for intra-observer measurements were higher than those for inter-observer measurements. The respective maximum inter- and intra-observer absolute differences were 13.9% and 13.2% in the ‘self-confirmed’ group, and 15.8% and 9.8% in the ‘designated’ group. Conclusions:. The areal measurement of the glenoid bone defect is more reliable than the linear measurement. The reliability of the glenoid defect areal measurement is moderate or worse, suggesting that a more accurate and objective measurement method is needed in both en-face view and best-fit circle determination. Subjective factors affecting the glenoid bone loss measurement should be minimized.
url http://journals.lww.com/10.1097/CM9.0000000000000481
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