Abstract

ObjectivePhrenic nerve conduction study is a marker of hypoventilation in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. We aimed to evaluate its intra-rater reliability in healthy subjects and in a cohort of Primary Lateral Sclerosis (PLS) patients. MethodsEighteen healthy subjects and 16 PLS patients were included. All subjects underwent three phrenic nerve conduction evaluations (time interval: 1 week for healthy controls; 1 year for PLS patients). We analyzed intra-rater reliability for five parameters of the diaphragmatic motor response: latency; negative-peak duration, area and amplitude; peak-to-peak amplitude. ResultsHealthy subjects showed excellent inter-test reliability for most parameters (coefficients of variation <10%). In PLS patients coefficients of variation resulted <10% for latency and peak-to-peak amplitude, <20% for remaining parameters. Inter-test reliability was excellent for latency and peak-to-peak amplitude [intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) > 0.9] and good for negative-peak amplitude and area (ICC 0.75 ≥ 0.9); duration was not reliable (ICC = 0.383). Negative peak and peak-to-peak amplitude had the least random error (respectively ±0.136 mV and ± 0.177 mV). All parameters showed homoscedasticity (R2 < 0.1). ConclusionsIntra-rater reliability is high for phrenic nerve study, especially for latency, peak-to-peak and negative-peak amplitude. SignificancePhrenic nerve conduction study is a reliable method to monitor respiratory function.

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