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Evaluation of the validity and reliability of the KFORCE Sens® electrogoniometer in evaluation of wrist proprioception.

Authors
  • Tekin, F1
  • Can-Akman, T2
  • Kitiş, A3
  • 1 Pamukkale University, School of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation, Çamlaraltı District, University Street, Kınıklı Campus, No: 11, 20160, Denizli, Turkey. Electronic address: [email protected]. , (Turkey)
  • 2 Pamukkale University, School of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation, Çamlaraltı District, University Street, Kınıklı Campus, No: 11, 20160, Denizli, Turkey. Electronic address: [email protected]. , (Turkey)
  • 3 Pamukkale University, School of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation, Çamlaraltı District, University Street, Kınıklı Campus, No: 11, 20160, Denizli, Turkey. Electronic address: [email protected]. , (Turkey)
Type
Published Article
Journal
Hand surgery & rehabilitation
Publication Date
Apr 01, 2022
Volume
41
Issue
2
Pages
183–188
Identifiers
DOI: 10.1016/j.hansur.2021.12.006
PMID: 34974162
Source
Medline
Keywords
Language
English
License
Unknown

Abstract

The aim of this study was to determine the validity and reliability of the KFORCE Sens® electrogoniometer in the evaluation of wrist proprioception. Wrist position sense was assessed on a Baseline® 360° universal goniometer and a KFORCE Sens® device. The validity and reliability of the KFORCE Sens® device for wrist position sense evaluation were investigated by comparing the two data sets. Fifty-three healthy volunteers (39 female, 14 male) with a mean age of 22.83 ± 1.28 years (range, 21-27 years) were included. Joint position sense test-retest reliability (intra-class correlation coefficient) on KFORCE Sens® was "very good" for all wrist movements. There was a very strong correlation between flexion-extension movements on the dominant side (r = 0.955), and a strong correlation between ulnar-radial deviation movements (r = 0.745). There was also a very strong (r = 0.863) correlation between flexion-extension movements on the non-dominant side and a strong correlation (r = 0.690) between ulnar-radial deviation movements (p < 0.05). Our results showed that the KFORCE Sens® device was a valid and reliable evaluation means of assessing wrist position sense. Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.

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