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      Incidence of foot rotation, pelvic crest unleveling, and supine leg length alignment asymmetry and their relationship to self-reported back pain.

      Journal of manipulative and physiological therapeutics
      Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Back Pain, diagnosis, epidemiology, physiopathology, Child, Chiropractic, Female, Foot, Humans, Incidence, Leg Length Inequality, Male, Middle Aged, Pain Measurement, methods, Pelvis, Posture, physiology, Questionnaires, Rotation, adverse effects, Self-Examination, Sensitivity and Specificity

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          Abstract

          To determine the incidence of pelvic unleveling, foot rotation, and supine leg length alignment asymmetry in a nonclinical population and to examine the validity (sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values) of these visual tests and their relationship to self-reported back pain. Volunteers answered a questionnaire regarding back pain and were then examined by a chiropractor who was unaware of the status of their back pain. Seventy-four unscreened volunteers answered the questionnaire. The association of visual tests with back pain and their validity indices; Visual Analogue Scale ratings. Fifty-one percent (n = 74) of volunteers examined had supine leg length alignment asymmetry (LLA). Pain intensity on a Visual Analogue Scale was significantly higher (P <.001) for those demonstrating supine LLA than for those without LLA. Those with back pain and recurrent back pain were significantly (P <.001) more likely to have supine LLA. The validity indices of the supine leg check showed acceptable levels for sensitivity (74%), specificity (78%), and positive predictive value (82%) [corrected] in recurrent back pain. Findings also indicated a high incidence of supine LLA in volunteers with chronic back pain (85%). The results indicated that, in this group of volunteers, the supine leg length alignment check had clinical validity as a stand-alone test for recurring back pain. Further testing on a larger, statistically defined cross-section of the population is recommended.

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