Agreement between anatomic and ultrasound measurements of femoral trochlear depth

Publikation: KonferencebidragPosterForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Agreement between anatomic and ultrasound measurements of femoral trochlear depth. / Miles, James Edward; Westrup, Ulrik; Eriksen, Thomas.

2013. Poster session præsenteret ved British Small Animal Veterinary Association Congress 2013, Birmingham, Storbritannien.

Publikation: KonferencebidragPosterForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Miles, JE, Westrup, U & Eriksen, T 2013, 'Agreement between anatomic and ultrasound measurements of femoral trochlear depth', British Small Animal Veterinary Association Congress 2013, Birmingham, Storbritannien, 03/04/2013 - 07/04/2013.

APA

Miles, J. E., Westrup, U., & Eriksen, T. (2013). Agreement between anatomic and ultrasound measurements of femoral trochlear depth. Poster session præsenteret ved British Small Animal Veterinary Association Congress 2013, Birmingham, Storbritannien.

Vancouver

Miles JE, Westrup U, Eriksen T. Agreement between anatomic and ultrasound measurements of femoral trochlear depth. 2013. Poster session præsenteret ved British Small Animal Veterinary Association Congress 2013, Birmingham, Storbritannien.

Author

Miles, James Edward ; Westrup, Ulrik ; Eriksen, Thomas. / Agreement between anatomic and ultrasound measurements of femoral trochlear depth. Poster session præsenteret ved British Small Animal Veterinary Association Congress 2013, Birmingham, Storbritannien.

Bibtex

@conference{43398472aeda4fc485471e0e4939f859,
title = "Agreement between anatomic and ultrasound measurements of femoral trochlear depth",
abstract = "Assessments of trochlear depth for patients with medial patellar luxation have traditionally been estimated from skyline radiographs or visually during surgery. Ultrasound offers a non-invasive evaluation method which could avoid the need for arthrotomy. We compared anatomic, radiographic and ultrasonographic measurements of trochlear depth using the red fox hind limb as a canine surrogate, dividing the trochlea into five regions from the origin of the caudal cruciate ligament to the proximal aspect of the trochlea.We found reasonable agreement between anatomic and ultrasonographic measurements as assessed by Bland-Altman difference charting and limits of agreement (approximately ±0.7mm). Differences may be accounted for by ultrasound probe positioning errors, which should be taken into consideration during clinical investigations. Skyline views were difficult to standardise to a distinct position in the trochlea but appeared to centre around the middle of the trochlea: the proximal section of the trochlea has been suggested to be most critical in medial patellar luxation, and thus the usefulness of this view is questionable.Trochlear depth in this study population was approximately 30% of patellar depth over the five regions examined. Measurement reliability for the ultrasonographic examinations was markedly less that for the skyline views (repeatability coefficient of 0.5mm vs 0.25mm), but still adequate for clinical use. A likely reason is the relative amount of detail recorded in the respective DICOM files which restricts ultrasonographic landmark resolution. Further work on quantifying interobserver variation and repeat measurement variation is required to ensure confidence in this technique.",
author = "Miles, {James Edward} and Ulrik Westrup and Thomas Eriksen",
year = "2013",
language = "English",
note = "British Small Animal Veterinary Association Congress 2013, BSAVA Congress 2013 ; Conference date: 03-04-2013 Through 07-04-2013",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Agreement between anatomic and ultrasound measurements of femoral trochlear depth

AU - Miles, James Edward

AU - Westrup, Ulrik

AU - Eriksen, Thomas

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Assessments of trochlear depth for patients with medial patellar luxation have traditionally been estimated from skyline radiographs or visually during surgery. Ultrasound offers a non-invasive evaluation method which could avoid the need for arthrotomy. We compared anatomic, radiographic and ultrasonographic measurements of trochlear depth using the red fox hind limb as a canine surrogate, dividing the trochlea into five regions from the origin of the caudal cruciate ligament to the proximal aspect of the trochlea.We found reasonable agreement between anatomic and ultrasonographic measurements as assessed by Bland-Altman difference charting and limits of agreement (approximately ±0.7mm). Differences may be accounted for by ultrasound probe positioning errors, which should be taken into consideration during clinical investigations. Skyline views were difficult to standardise to a distinct position in the trochlea but appeared to centre around the middle of the trochlea: the proximal section of the trochlea has been suggested to be most critical in medial patellar luxation, and thus the usefulness of this view is questionable.Trochlear depth in this study population was approximately 30% of patellar depth over the five regions examined. Measurement reliability for the ultrasonographic examinations was markedly less that for the skyline views (repeatability coefficient of 0.5mm vs 0.25mm), but still adequate for clinical use. A likely reason is the relative amount of detail recorded in the respective DICOM files which restricts ultrasonographic landmark resolution. Further work on quantifying interobserver variation and repeat measurement variation is required to ensure confidence in this technique.

AB - Assessments of trochlear depth for patients with medial patellar luxation have traditionally been estimated from skyline radiographs or visually during surgery. Ultrasound offers a non-invasive evaluation method which could avoid the need for arthrotomy. We compared anatomic, radiographic and ultrasonographic measurements of trochlear depth using the red fox hind limb as a canine surrogate, dividing the trochlea into five regions from the origin of the caudal cruciate ligament to the proximal aspect of the trochlea.We found reasonable agreement between anatomic and ultrasonographic measurements as assessed by Bland-Altman difference charting and limits of agreement (approximately ±0.7mm). Differences may be accounted for by ultrasound probe positioning errors, which should be taken into consideration during clinical investigations. Skyline views were difficult to standardise to a distinct position in the trochlea but appeared to centre around the middle of the trochlea: the proximal section of the trochlea has been suggested to be most critical in medial patellar luxation, and thus the usefulness of this view is questionable.Trochlear depth in this study population was approximately 30% of patellar depth over the five regions examined. Measurement reliability for the ultrasonographic examinations was markedly less that for the skyline views (repeatability coefficient of 0.5mm vs 0.25mm), but still adequate for clinical use. A likely reason is the relative amount of detail recorded in the respective DICOM files which restricts ultrasonographic landmark resolution. Further work on quantifying interobserver variation and repeat measurement variation is required to ensure confidence in this technique.

M3 - Poster

T2 - British Small Animal Veterinary Association Congress 2013

Y2 - 3 April 2013 through 7 April 2013

ER -

ID: 43682206