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Repeatability of Nerve conduction Measurements using Automation

OBJECTIVE: To quantify nerve conduction study (NCS) reproducibility utilizing an automated NCS system (NC-stat(®), NeuroMetrix, Inc.). METHOD: Healthy volunteers without neuropathic symptoms participated in the study. Their median, ulnar, peroneal, and tibial nerves were tested twice (7 days apart)...

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Autores principales: Kong, Xuan, Lesser, Eugene A., Megerian, J. Thomas, Gozani, Shai N.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Netherlands 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2780662/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16972142
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10877-006-9046-8
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author Kong, Xuan
Lesser, Eugene A.
Megerian, J. Thomas
Gozani, Shai N.
author_facet Kong, Xuan
Lesser, Eugene A.
Megerian, J. Thomas
Gozani, Shai N.
author_sort Kong, Xuan
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To quantify nerve conduction study (NCS) reproducibility utilizing an automated NCS system (NC-stat(®), NeuroMetrix, Inc.). METHOD: Healthy volunteers without neuropathic symptoms participated in the study. Their median, ulnar, peroneal, and tibial nerves were tested twice (7 days apart) by the same technician with an NC-stat(®) instrument. Pre-fabricated electrode arrays specific to each nerve were used. Both motor responses (compound motor action potential [CMAP] and F-waves –all nerves) and sensory responses (sensory nerve action potentials [SNAP] –median and ulnar nerves only) were recorded following supramaximal stimuli. Automated algorithms determined all NCS parameters: distal motor latency (DML), mean F-wave latency (FWL), distal sensory latency (DSL), CMAP amplitude, and SNAP amplitude. Latency was adjusted for skin temperature deviation from reference. Pearson correlation coefficient (CC), intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), coefficient of variance (CoV), and relative intertrial variation (RIV) were calculated. RESULTS: Fifteen subjects participated in either upper or lower extremity studies with nine participating in both. With the exception of CMAP amplitude, all parameters had CoV less than 0.06. Upper extremity amplitude parameters had CCs greater than 0.85. CCs for latencies were greater than 0.80 except for the median nerve FWL (CC = 0.69). For lower extremity nerves, ICCs were highest for mean FWL (>0.90), followed by DML (>0.82) and then CMAP (peroneal 0.33, tibial 0.73). The 10th to 90th RIV percentiles were bounded by ±7% for F-wave latencies; ±9% for all DSLs; and ±11% for DML (except peroneal at 15%). CONCLUSIONS: The reproducibility of NCS parameters obtained with an automated NCS instrument compared favorably with traditional electromyography laboratories. F-wave latencies had the highest repeatability, followed by DML, DSL, SNAP and CMAP amplitude. Given their high reproducibility, automated NCS instrument may encourage wider utilization of NCS in clinical and research applications.
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spelling pubmed-27806622009-11-23 Repeatability of Nerve conduction Measurements using Automation Kong, Xuan Lesser, Eugene A. Megerian, J. Thomas Gozani, Shai N. J Clin Monit Comput Article OBJECTIVE: To quantify nerve conduction study (NCS) reproducibility utilizing an automated NCS system (NC-stat(®), NeuroMetrix, Inc.). METHOD: Healthy volunteers without neuropathic symptoms participated in the study. Their median, ulnar, peroneal, and tibial nerves were tested twice (7 days apart) by the same technician with an NC-stat(®) instrument. Pre-fabricated electrode arrays specific to each nerve were used. Both motor responses (compound motor action potential [CMAP] and F-waves –all nerves) and sensory responses (sensory nerve action potentials [SNAP] –median and ulnar nerves only) were recorded following supramaximal stimuli. Automated algorithms determined all NCS parameters: distal motor latency (DML), mean F-wave latency (FWL), distal sensory latency (DSL), CMAP amplitude, and SNAP amplitude. Latency was adjusted for skin temperature deviation from reference. Pearson correlation coefficient (CC), intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), coefficient of variance (CoV), and relative intertrial variation (RIV) were calculated. RESULTS: Fifteen subjects participated in either upper or lower extremity studies with nine participating in both. With the exception of CMAP amplitude, all parameters had CoV less than 0.06. Upper extremity amplitude parameters had CCs greater than 0.85. CCs for latencies were greater than 0.80 except for the median nerve FWL (CC = 0.69). For lower extremity nerves, ICCs were highest for mean FWL (>0.90), followed by DML (>0.82) and then CMAP (peroneal 0.33, tibial 0.73). The 10th to 90th RIV percentiles were bounded by ±7% for F-wave latencies; ±9% for all DSLs; and ±11% for DML (except peroneal at 15%). CONCLUSIONS: The reproducibility of NCS parameters obtained with an automated NCS instrument compared favorably with traditional electromyography laboratories. F-wave latencies had the highest repeatability, followed by DML, DSL, SNAP and CMAP amplitude. Given their high reproducibility, automated NCS instrument may encourage wider utilization of NCS in clinical and research applications. Springer Netherlands 2006-09-14 2006-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2780662/ /pubmed/16972142 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10877-006-9046-8 Text en © Springer Science+Business Media, Inc. 2006
spellingShingle Article
Kong, Xuan
Lesser, Eugene A.
Megerian, J. Thomas
Gozani, Shai N.
Repeatability of Nerve conduction Measurements using Automation
title Repeatability of Nerve conduction Measurements using Automation
title_full Repeatability of Nerve conduction Measurements using Automation
title_fullStr Repeatability of Nerve conduction Measurements using Automation
title_full_unstemmed Repeatability of Nerve conduction Measurements using Automation
title_short Repeatability of Nerve conduction Measurements using Automation
title_sort repeatability of nerve conduction measurements using automation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2780662/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16972142
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10877-006-9046-8
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