• Clinical rehabilitation · Oct 2012

    Review

    Reliability of real-time ultrasound for measuring skeletal muscle size in human limbs in vivo: a systematic review.

    • Coralie English, Laura Fisher, and Kerry Thoirs.
    • International Centre for Allied Health Evidence, School of Health Sciences, University of South Australia, Australia. Coralie.english@unisa.edu.au
    • Clin Rehabil. 2012 Oct 1;26(10):934-44.

    ObjectiveTo systematically review evidence for the reliability of real-time brightness-mode ultrasound for assessing skeletal muscle size in human limbs in vivo and to establish in which populations and anatomical sites the reliability had been tested.Data SourcesArticles were retrieved via electronic database searching and expert contact.Study SelectionStudies reporting reliability indices of test-retest measures of real-time brightness-mode ultrasound measures of skeletal muscle size within human limbs were included.Data ExtractionArticles were assessed for methodological quality by two reviewers, decisions were made by consensus. Participant characteristics, measurement protocol, ultrasound protocol, type of reliability measured and statistical methods were extracted by one reviewer.Data SynthesisTwenty-four articles were included, involving 605 participants. Studies were of low to moderate methodological quality. Most studies were conducted within the healthy population. Only one study demonstrated poor reliability at one site only, and only when the participants were measured in the supine position.ConclusionThere is a moderate amount of low-level evidence that real-time brightness-mode ultrasound has good reliability for measuring muscle size across a number of limb sites in healthy populations. There is limited evidence for the reliability of ultrasound measures of muscle size in clinical populations.

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