Reproducibility of clinician-friendly physical performance measures in individuals with obesity

Objective: To evaluate the reproducibility (reliability and agreement) of different physical performance measures in individuals with obesity. Methods: Forty subjects (20 men, 20 women), mean age 29 years, mean body mass index (BMI) 42 kg/m2 completed several clinician-frien...

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Main Authors: Nicola A. Maffiuletti, Gabriela Tringali, Alessandra Patrizi, Fiorenza Agosti, Alessandro Sartorio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Foundation for Rehabilitation Information 2017-08-01
Series:Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access: https://www.medicaljournals.se/jrm/content/html/10.2340/16501977-2263
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spelling doaj-93e37912955741babed017da8c5aec842020-11-24T22:40:14ZengFoundation for Rehabilitation InformationJournal of Rehabilitation Medicine1650-19771651-20812017-08-0149867768110.2340/16501977-22632344Reproducibility of clinician-friendly physical performance measures in individuals with obesityNicola A. Maffiuletti0Gabriela TringaliAlessandra PatriziFiorenza AgostiAlessandro Sartorio Neuromuscular Research Laboratory, Schulthess Clinic, 8008 Zurich, Switzerland. nicola.maffiuletti@kws.ch. Objective: To evaluate the reproducibility (reliability and agreement) of different physical performance measures in individuals with obesity. Methods: Forty subjects (20 men, 20 women), mean age 29 years, mean body mass index (BMI) 42 kg/m2 completed several clinician-friendly performance-based tests (walking, stair-climbing, sit-to-stand, static balance, flexibility and strength) on 2 different occasions (test-retest design). Intraclass correlation coefficients (reliability) and smallest detectable changes (agreement) were calculated for each outcome measure. Results: Intraclass correlation coefficients were relatively high (range 0.84–0.94) for all the performance-based measures (i.e. acceptable reliability). Smallest detectable changes were overall quite high and beyond the arbitrarily-defined minimal clinically important changes (i.e. poor agreement) for 3 out of 8 variables (sit-to-stand time, time-in-balance with eyes closed, and sit-and-reach distance). Conclusion: The clinician-friendly performance-based tests for individuals with obesity considered in this study appear legitimate for discriminative purposes, such as in cross-sectional studies. However, for longi-tudinal assessments (evaluative purposes), some measures should be used with greater caution due to limited agreement. Careful consideration should be given to the evaluation of physical performance in people with obesity, particularly in the context of conservative or surgical treatment for weight loss. https://www.medicaljournals.se/jrm/content/html/10.2340/16501977-2263 obesityphysicalperformanceoutcomesreproducibility
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicola A. Maffiuletti
Gabriela Tringali
Alessandra Patrizi
Fiorenza Agosti
Alessandro Sartorio
spellingShingle Nicola A. Maffiuletti
Gabriela Tringali
Alessandra Patrizi
Fiorenza Agosti
Alessandro Sartorio
Reproducibility of clinician-friendly physical performance measures in individuals with obesity
Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine
obesity
physicalperformance
outcomes
reproducibility
author_facet Nicola A. Maffiuletti
Gabriela Tringali
Alessandra Patrizi
Fiorenza Agosti
Alessandro Sartorio
author_sort Nicola A. Maffiuletti
title Reproducibility of clinician-friendly physical performance measures in individuals with obesity
title_short Reproducibility of clinician-friendly physical performance measures in individuals with obesity
title_full Reproducibility of clinician-friendly physical performance measures in individuals with obesity
title_fullStr Reproducibility of clinician-friendly physical performance measures in individuals with obesity
title_full_unstemmed Reproducibility of clinician-friendly physical performance measures in individuals with obesity
title_sort reproducibility of clinician-friendly physical performance measures in individuals with obesity
publisher Foundation for Rehabilitation Information
series Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine
issn 1650-1977
1651-2081
publishDate 2017-08-01
description Objective: To evaluate the reproducibility (reliability and agreement) of different physical performance measures in individuals with obesity. Methods: Forty subjects (20 men, 20 women), mean age 29 years, mean body mass index (BMI) 42 kg/m2 completed several clinician-friendly performance-based tests (walking, stair-climbing, sit-to-stand, static balance, flexibility and strength) on 2 different occasions (test-retest design). Intraclass correlation coefficients (reliability) and smallest detectable changes (agreement) were calculated for each outcome measure. Results: Intraclass correlation coefficients were relatively high (range 0.84–0.94) for all the performance-based measures (i.e. acceptable reliability). Smallest detectable changes were overall quite high and beyond the arbitrarily-defined minimal clinically important changes (i.e. poor agreement) for 3 out of 8 variables (sit-to-stand time, time-in-balance with eyes closed, and sit-and-reach distance). Conclusion: The clinician-friendly performance-based tests for individuals with obesity considered in this study appear legitimate for discriminative purposes, such as in cross-sectional studies. However, for longi-tudinal assessments (evaluative purposes), some measures should be used with greater caution due to limited agreement. Careful consideration should be given to the evaluation of physical performance in people with obesity, particularly in the context of conservative or surgical treatment for weight loss.
topic obesity
physicalperformance
outcomes
reproducibility
url https://www.medicaljournals.se/jrm/content/html/10.2340/16501977-2263
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