Reliability and Validity of Ultrasonography for Measurement of Hamstring Muscle and Tendon Cross-Sectional Area

Author(s)
Kositsky, Adam
Gonçalves, Basílio AM
Stenroth, Lauri
Barrett, Rod S
Diamond, Laura E
Saxby, David J
Year published
2019
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The purpose of this study was to determine the reliability and validity of ultrasonography for measurement of hamstring muscle and semitendinosus (ST) tendon cross-sectional area (CSA). On two consecutive days, muscle anatomical CSA (ACSA) and ST tendon CSA were measured at standardized positions (30%–80% of thigh length; half the distance from the distal muscle-tendon junction to the popliteal crease) on 12 legs using ultrasonography and compared with corresponding magnetic resonance imaging measures. Inter-day intraclass correlation coefficients were good-to-excellent (0.882–0.996) for all assessed muscle and tendon sites. ...
View more >The purpose of this study was to determine the reliability and validity of ultrasonography for measurement of hamstring muscle and semitendinosus (ST) tendon cross-sectional area (CSA). On two consecutive days, muscle anatomical CSA (ACSA) and ST tendon CSA were measured at standardized positions (30%–80% of thigh length; half the distance from the distal muscle-tendon junction to the popliteal crease) on 12 legs using ultrasonography and compared with corresponding magnetic resonance imaging measures. Inter-day intraclass correlation coefficients were good-to-excellent (0.882–0.996) for all assessed muscle and tendon sites. The limits of agreement widths were narrowest (range: 17%–52%) when muscle ACSA was large but were wide at sites with relatively small ACSA (≤184%) and for ST tendon CSA (range: 72%). Results suggest ultrasound-based measures of individual hamstring muscle maximal ACSA are reliable and valid and ST tendon CSA measures are reliable but require comparison with cadaveric or intra-operative measurements to verify validity.
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View more >The purpose of this study was to determine the reliability and validity of ultrasonography for measurement of hamstring muscle and semitendinosus (ST) tendon cross-sectional area (CSA). On two consecutive days, muscle anatomical CSA (ACSA) and ST tendon CSA were measured at standardized positions (30%–80% of thigh length; half the distance from the distal muscle-tendon junction to the popliteal crease) on 12 legs using ultrasonography and compared with corresponding magnetic resonance imaging measures. Inter-day intraclass correlation coefficients were good-to-excellent (0.882–0.996) for all assessed muscle and tendon sites. The limits of agreement widths were narrowest (range: 17%–52%) when muscle ACSA was large but were wide at sites with relatively small ACSA (≤184%) and for ST tendon CSA (range: 72%). Results suggest ultrasound-based measures of individual hamstring muscle maximal ACSA are reliable and valid and ST tendon CSA measures are reliable but require comparison with cadaveric or intra-operative measurements to verify validity.
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Journal Title
Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology
Note
This publication has been entered into Griffith Research Online as an Advanced Online Version
Subject
Clinical sciences