Abstract
ObjectivesDocument reliability and normative data for a novel device measuring weight-bearing ankle range of motion after ankle injury. DesignCross-sectional Cohort, two occasions one day apart. SettingSports medicine hospital. Participants87 ankle-injured male athletes at a late stage of their rehabilitation and 25 uninjured subjects. The injured athletes had met all criteria to return to functional, on-field rehabilitation. Main outcome measuresReliability (Intra-Class correlation Coefficient (ICC), and Minimum Detectable Change as a percent of the grand mean), weight-bearing range of motion (degrees) of dorsiflexion, plantarflexion, inversion, and eversion. ResultsGood (dorsiflexion = 0.82[0.76–0.87] and inversion = 0.81[0.75–0.86]) and excellent (plantarflexion = 0.93[0.90–0.95]) reliability was documented, however reliability for the eversion measure showed only fair reliability (0.61[0.49–0.70]). Reduced range of motion in the injured leg was seen in all 4 directions, however with different magnitudes: Large differences were plantarflexion (−8.5°, ES = 0.80), medium for dorsiflexion (−5.2°, 0.57), small for inversion (−4.8°, 0.36), and trivial for eversion (−1.7°, 0.15). ConclusionThe device demonstrated clinically useful reliability for measuring these ranges of motion in a functional, weight-bearing position. PF ROM showed the greatest reduction in range in these athletes at a late stage of their rehabilitation.
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