Different spinal ranges of motion (ROM) were measured and the results of 17 repeated tests correlated with spinal radiological changes in 52 male patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS). Both Schober tests and measurements of lumbar and cervical rotations (TRi, TR, CR, CRt) and lateral flexions (LFLf, LFLx, CLFLt, CLFLm), together with thoracolumbar flexion (ThFL), cervical flexion-extension measurements (CFL, CExt), and tragus - wall and occiput - wall distances (OWD,TWD), showed significant correlations with detailed radiological spinal changes. Cervical rotation (CRm, CRt) and flexion (CFLm) correlated only with cervical changes, and thoracolumbar rotation as assessed by instrument (TRi) correlated only weakly with lumbar changes, while chin-chest distance (CCD) and chest expansion (CE) showed no correlation. Inter- and intratester reliability was good in all tests (the intraclass correlation coefficients ranged from 0.84 to 0.98). Three new tape methods for measuring thoracolumbar and cervical rotations and cervical lateral flexion also proved to be valid and reliable, as did the Schober-S1 modification. We conclude that the thoracolumbar segment (Schober), whole (ThFL) and lateral (LFL) flexions and rotation (TR), and chest expansion (CE) (after careful standardisation) together with cervical rotation (CR), extension (CExt) and/or lateral flexion (CLFL) comprise the set of mobility tests for the follow-up and assessment of disease progression in AS. On the other hand, cervical (forward) flexion (CFL), chin-chest distance (CCD) and an instrument method for thoracolumbar rotation (TRi) are not approaches to be recommended.
Results of a 'new' method for thoracolumbar rotation by tape (TRPav), simple instrumental rotation (TRi), the modified Schober test and thoracolumbar flexion (ThFL) were correlated with radiological changes in patients with ankylosing spondylitis (AS). TRPav showed a significant radiological correlation (Ls-r: 0.38; Th-r: 0.31), while the instrument method (TRi) did not; both the Schober test and ThFL, again, correlated fairly highly (Ls-r: 0.71, 0.62; Th-r: 0.49, 0.42). Both inter- and intratester reliability of the tests was good (Bland and Altman plots). Thoracolumbar rotation is one of the three principal levels of spinal motion and seems to be less affected by age. TRPav proved a valid and reliable method for measuring thoracolumbar rotation and clinically is a non-invasive, quick and easy complement to AS measurement methodologies.
The objective of the study was to determine the long-term functional outcome of chronic spondylarthropathy (SpA) when measured by various functional indices. This information is important in the planning of long-term intervention studies and selection of the best follow-up methods. The study group consisted of 65 patients (21 women and 44 men) with SpA. Their mean age was 49 years and the mean age from diagnosis was 12 years. They completed several questionnaires (developed for the evaluation of functional capacity or the state of health of patients with SpA) at the beginning of the study and 3 years later. The questionnaires were: the Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Functional Index (BASFI), the Dougados Functional Index (DFI), the Health Assessment Questionnaire for Spondylarthropathies (HAQ-S), the Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Disease Activity Index (BASDAI), the Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Patient Global Assessment (BAS-G) and Stiffness-VAS (on a visual analogue scale). We also asked the patients to inform us if something had occurred in their lives during the follow-up that might have affected their health. Most of the indices (BASFI, DFI, BASDAI, BAS-G and Stiffness-VAS, but not HAQ-S) showed a statistically significant reduction in the functional capacity or state of health of the patients during the follow-up. Many factors occurring during the 3-year period may have influenced the results of the indices. The natural course of the functional capacity of patients with SpA appears to be one of impairment, when evaluated using these indices. Our experience also showed that it is very difficult to separate any effect of a single treatment intervention (e.g. rehabilitation) in a long-term follow-up study, as so many interfering factors, e.g. life events and health-related factors, may affect the follow-up population over several years.
The aim of the study was to compare and evaluate the usefulness of Finnish versions of two functional indices used in spondylarthropathies. Seventy consecutive inpatients with different kinds of spondylarthropathies filled in self-administered questionnaires: the Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Functional Index (BASFI) and the Dougados Functional Index for spondylarthropathies (DFI). Cronbach's alpha as a coefficient of internal consistency was analysed for BASFI and DFI. Test-retest reliability was evaluated in 30 patients. For validity the functional indices were compared with the Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Disease Activity Index (BASDAI), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), spinal movement measures of chest expansion (CE), Schober S1 test and occiput-to-wall distance (OWD), and radiological changes in the lumbar spine (RTGLS) and sacroiliac joints (RTGSI). The reproducibility of the indices BASFI and DFI was good; the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for reliability was 0.99 and 0.98, and the coefficient of internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha) was 0.94 for both BASFI and DFI. The functional indices correlated well with each other, r = 0.85 (95% CI 0.78-0.90). Validity in terms of correlation coefficients between disease activity index BASDAI and functional indices BASFI and DFI was 0.74 (95% CI 0.60-0.84) and 0.69 (95% CI 0.53-0.80), respectively. BASFI and DFI correlated with spinal mobility measurements and RTGLS, but DFI did not correlate with RTGSI. Neither BASFI nor DFI correlated with ESR and disease duration, and only DFI correlated with age. In conclusion, BASFI and DFI are reliable and valid for Finnish inpatients with spondylarthropathies. It is important to know that cultural differences do not reduce the usefulness of these indices.
X-rays of 20 finger joints, 10 foot joints and 2 wrists of 50 female patients with seropositive rheumatoid arthritis of 10-15 years' duration from 1962, 1972, 1982 and 1992 were evaluated blindly for erosions. A highly significant decline was observed in erosions in finger joints. Erosions had also declined in wrists and in foot joints, though less than in fingers. This may indicate improvement in the long-term outcome of rheumatoid arthritis.
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