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Equine veterinary journal · Jul 2011
Observer agreement study of cervical-vertebral ratios in horses.
- P V Scrivani, J M Levine, N L Holmes, M Furr, T J Divers, and N D Cohen.
- Department of Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA. pvs2@cornell.edu
- Equine Vet. J. 2011 Jul 1; 43 (4): 399-403.
Reason For Performing StudyDifferent examiners or the same examiner were observed at different times producing slightly different results when obtaining cervical-vertebral ratios. If the difference is substantial, then measurement variability would have an important impact of radiographic interpretation.ObjectiveTo quantify agreement and repeatability of these measurements.MethodsAn observer agreement study was performed using 75 horses. Measurements were made at C3-4 and C6-7 by a board-certified radiologist and an imaging resident. Intra- and interobserver agreement was quantified using Bland-Altman plots. Repeatability was assessed as the percentage of differences between duplicate measurements by the radiologist that were within ± 2 s.d. of the differences.ResultsAt C3-4, the limits of agreement for the intra-vertebral ratio were between -5 and 4% for the intra- and -5 and 6% for interobserver comparison. For the intervertebral ratio, they were between -9 and 8% for the intra- and -10 and 10% for interobserver comparison. At C6-7, the limits of agreement for the intra-vertebral ratio were between -6 and 5% for the intra- and -6 and 8% for interobserver comparison. For the intervertebral ratio, they were between -7 and 7% for the intra- and -6 and 13% for interobserver comparison. At C3-4, all measurements were 95% repeatable (differences typically ≤ 4% and always ≤ 8%) for the intra-vertebral ratio and 96% repeatable (differences typically ≤ 8% and always ≤ 11%) for the intervertebral ratio. At C6-7, all measurements were 98% repeatable (differences typically ≤ 6% and always ≤ 7%) for the intravertebral ratio and 92% repeatable (differences typically ≤ 6% and always ≤ 10%) for the intervertebral ratio.ConclusionsCervical-vertebral ratios typically varied by 5-10% within and between examiners.Potential RelevanceWhen using cervical-vertebral ratios in practice, the impact of measurement agreement should be factored into the interpretation of the test result because measurement variability may lead to misdiagnosis and limit the clinical usefulness of these tests.© 2010 EVJ Ltd.
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