Abstract

BackgroundAchilles tendinopathy is the predominant overuse injury in runners. To further investigate this overload injury in transverse and longitudinal studies a valid, responsive and reliable outcome measure is demanded. Most questionnaires have been developed for English-speaking populations. This is also true for the VISA-A score, so far representing the only valid, reliable, and disease specific questionnaire for Achilles tendinopathy. To internationally compare research results, to perform multinational studies or to exclude bias originating from subpopulations speaking different languages within one country an equivalent instrument is demanded in different languages. The aim of this study was therefore to cross-cultural adapt and validate the VISA-A questionnaire for German-speaking Achilles tendinopathy patients.MethodsAccording to the "guidelines for the process of cross-cultural adaptation of self-report measures" the VISA-A score was cross-culturally adapted into German (VISA-A-G) using six steps: Translation, synthesis, back translation, expert committee review, pretesting (n = 77), and appraisal of the adaptation process by an advisory committee determining the adequacy of the cross-cultural adaptation. The resulting VISA-A-G was then subjected to an analysis of reliability, validity, and internal consistency in 30 Achilles tendinopathy patients and 79 asymptomatic people. Concurrent validity was tested against a generic tendon grading system (Percy and Conochie) and against a classification system for the effect of pain on athletic performance (Curwin and Stanish).ResultsThe "advisory committee" determined the VISA-A-G questionnaire as been translated "acceptable". The VISA-A-G questionnaire showed moderate to excellent test-retest reliability (ICC = 0.60 to 0.97). Concurrent validity showed good coherence when correlated with the grading system of Curwin and Stanish (rho = -0.95) and for the Percy and Conochie grade of severity (rho 0.95). Internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha) for the total VISA-A-G scores of the patients was calculated to be 0.737.ConclusionThe VISA-A questionnaire was successfully cross-cultural adapted and validated for use in German speaking populations. The psychometric properties of the VISA-A-G questionnaire are similar to those of the original English version. It therefore can be recommended as a sufficiently robust tool for future measuring clinical severity of Achilles tendinopathy in German speaking patients.

Highlights

  • Achilles tendinopathy is the predominant overuse injury in runners

  • Cross-cultural adaptation of the VISA-A to the VISA-A-G questionnaire With regards to content one of the forward translators had troubles to understand the meaning of the predetermined different answers and scorings to question 8 ("If you have no pain while undertaking Achilles tendon loading sports, for how long can you train/practise?"): If someone would have no sport related Achilles tendon pain, (s)he will be able to train as long as (s)he likes

  • All persons free of Achilles tendon pain would be expected to score 30 points. In this sense this question seemed to be irrelevant for patients suffering from Achilles tendinopathy

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Summary

Introduction

Achilles tendinopathy is the predominant overuse injury in runners To further investigate this overload injury in transverse and longitudinal studies a valid, responsive and reliable outcome measure is demanded. Most questionnaires have been developed for English-speaking populations This is true for the VISA-A score, so far representing the only valid, reliable, and disease specific questionnaire for Achilles tendinopathy. The worth of conservative and operative treatment options is still under debate [7] To further investigate these issues in transverse and longitudinal studies a valid, responsive, and reliable outcome measure is demanded. For this reason an international group of experts from the Victorian Institute of Sports Assessment developed the VISA-A (the second A stands for "Achilles tendon") questionnaire [8]. A summed maximum score of 100 represents an asymptomatic person [8]

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