Daffin, Lee, Innes, Stanley and Stuelcken, Max C. (2024) An investigation of the reproducibility of a self-selected natural feet position when standing: Implications for the assessment of upright standing posture. Musculoskeletal Science and Practice, 69 . ISSN 2468-7812
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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.msksp.2023.102896
Abstract
Background
Photogrammetry is often used to evaluate standing static postural alignment. Patients are often instructed to self-select a natural feet position but it's unclear whether this position can be consistently replicated across repeated assessments.
Objective
To determine whether people can replicate a self-selected natural feet position in upright standing across three sessions on different days.
Design
Between days test-retest reliability.
Setting
University laboratory.
Methods
Three variables – Base of Support (BoS), Foot Width (FW), Feet Opening Angle (FOA) – were measured from foot tracings of 150 participants (18–30 years) using established procedures. BoS data were assessed for systematic bias (Analysis of Variance), and absolute (Coefficient of Variation - CV%) and relative (Intraclass Correlation Coefficient - ICC) reliability.
Results
There was systematic bias in the BoS data across the three testing sessions. The CV% for the BoS data was 15.2%. The ICC (95% CI) for the BoS data was 0.84 (0.79–0.87). There were moderate-large correlations between the BoS and both FOA and FW respectively within each session.
Conclusion
If clinicians want to allow patients to use their self-selected natural feet position for repeated photogrammetric assessment of their static postural alignment it would be better to standardise the position of the feet, for example, by creating a tracing of a patient's self-selected natural feet position.
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