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Rater Agreement on Gait Assessment during Neurologic Examination of Horses

BACKGROUND: Reproducible and accurate recognition of presence and severity of ataxia in horses with neurologic disease is important when establishing a diagnosis, assessing response to treatment, and making recommendations that might influence rider safety or a decision for euthanasia. OBJECTIVES: T...

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Autores principales: Olsen, E., Dunkel, B., Barker, W.H.J., Finding, E.J.T., Perkins, J.D., Witte, T.H., Yates, L.J., Andersen, P.H., Baiker, K., Piercy, R.J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4857973/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24612411
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jvim.12320
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author Olsen, E.
Dunkel, B.
Barker, W.H.J.
Finding, E.J.T.
Perkins, J.D.
Witte, T.H.
Yates, L.J.
Andersen, P.H.
Baiker, K.
Piercy, R.J.
author_facet Olsen, E.
Dunkel, B.
Barker, W.H.J.
Finding, E.J.T.
Perkins, J.D.
Witte, T.H.
Yates, L.J.
Andersen, P.H.
Baiker, K.
Piercy, R.J.
author_sort Olsen, E.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Reproducible and accurate recognition of presence and severity of ataxia in horses with neurologic disease is important when establishing a diagnosis, assessing response to treatment, and making recommendations that might influence rider safety or a decision for euthanasia. OBJECTIVES: To determine the reproducibility and validity of the gait assessment component in the neurologic examination of horses. ANIMALS: Twenty‐five horses referred to the Royal Veterinary College Equine Referral Hospital for neurological assessment (n = 15), purchased (without a history of gait abnormalities) for an unrelated study (n = 5), or donated because of perceived ataxia (n = 5). METHODS: Utilizing a prospective study design; a group of board‐certified medicine (n = 2) and surgery (n = 2) clinicians and residents (n = 2) assessed components of the equine neurologic examination (live and video recorded) and assigned individual and overall neurologic gait deficit grades (0–4). Inter‐rater agreement and assessment‐reassessment reliability were quantified using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC). RESULTS: The ICCs of the selected components of the neurologic examination ranged from 0 to 0.69. “Backing up” and “recognition of mistakes over obstacle” were the only components with an ICC > 0.6. Assessment‐reassessment agreement was poor to fair. The agreement on gait grading was good overall (ICC = 0.74), but poor for grades ≤ 1 (ICC = 0.08) and fair for ataxia grades ≥ 2 (ICC = 0.43). Clinicians with prior knowledge of a possible gait abnormality were more likely to assign a grade higher than the median grade. CONCLUSION AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Clinicians should be aware of poor agreement even between skilled observers of equine gait abnormalities, especially when the clinical signs are subtle.
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spelling pubmed-48579732016-06-22 Rater Agreement on Gait Assessment during Neurologic Examination of Horses Olsen, E. Dunkel, B. Barker, W.H.J. Finding, E.J.T. Perkins, J.D. Witte, T.H. Yates, L.J. Andersen, P.H. Baiker, K. Piercy, R.J. J Vet Intern Med Standard Articles BACKGROUND: Reproducible and accurate recognition of presence and severity of ataxia in horses with neurologic disease is important when establishing a diagnosis, assessing response to treatment, and making recommendations that might influence rider safety or a decision for euthanasia. OBJECTIVES: To determine the reproducibility and validity of the gait assessment component in the neurologic examination of horses. ANIMALS: Twenty‐five horses referred to the Royal Veterinary College Equine Referral Hospital for neurological assessment (n = 15), purchased (without a history of gait abnormalities) for an unrelated study (n = 5), or donated because of perceived ataxia (n = 5). METHODS: Utilizing a prospective study design; a group of board‐certified medicine (n = 2) and surgery (n = 2) clinicians and residents (n = 2) assessed components of the equine neurologic examination (live and video recorded) and assigned individual and overall neurologic gait deficit grades (0–4). Inter‐rater agreement and assessment‐reassessment reliability were quantified using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC). RESULTS: The ICCs of the selected components of the neurologic examination ranged from 0 to 0.69. “Backing up” and “recognition of mistakes over obstacle” were the only components with an ICC > 0.6. Assessment‐reassessment agreement was poor to fair. The agreement on gait grading was good overall (ICC = 0.74), but poor for grades ≤ 1 (ICC = 0.08) and fair for ataxia grades ≥ 2 (ICC = 0.43). Clinicians with prior knowledge of a possible gait abnormality were more likely to assign a grade higher than the median grade. CONCLUSION AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Clinicians should be aware of poor agreement even between skilled observers of equine gait abnormalities, especially when the clinical signs are subtle. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2014-02-24 2014 /pmc/articles/PMC4857973/ /pubmed/24612411 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jvim.12320 Text en Copyright © 2014 American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine Open access.
spellingShingle Standard Articles
Olsen, E.
Dunkel, B.
Barker, W.H.J.
Finding, E.J.T.
Perkins, J.D.
Witte, T.H.
Yates, L.J.
Andersen, P.H.
Baiker, K.
Piercy, R.J.
Rater Agreement on Gait Assessment during Neurologic Examination of Horses
title Rater Agreement on Gait Assessment during Neurologic Examination of Horses
title_full Rater Agreement on Gait Assessment during Neurologic Examination of Horses
title_fullStr Rater Agreement on Gait Assessment during Neurologic Examination of Horses
title_full_unstemmed Rater Agreement on Gait Assessment during Neurologic Examination of Horses
title_short Rater Agreement on Gait Assessment during Neurologic Examination of Horses
title_sort rater agreement on gait assessment during neurologic examination of horses
topic Standard Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4857973/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24612411
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jvim.12320
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