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Ankle disability scales Submitted by Md Saifur Rahman Mpt(sports )

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Page 1: ANKLE DISABILITY

Ankle disability scales

Submitted by

Md Saifur Rahman

Mpt(sports )

Page 2: ANKLE DISABILITY

INTRODUCTION◦It has been estimated that the prevalence of foot pain in community dwelling adults aged 65 years

and over is between 20 and 42% . Foot pain is known to contribute to locomotors disability1.

◦Assessment of outcomes from the patient's perspective becomes more recognized in health care. Also in patients with

◦ chronic ankle instability,

◦ the degree of present impairments,

◦ disabilities and participation problems should be documented from the perspective of the patient.

◦There is growing interest in foot health in rheumatology and because of its pivotal role in gait and posture, researchers and clinicians have developed a number of surveys and assessments for measuring of foot health and its impact on quality of life.

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◦Most commonly problems of foot arise during our daily living activities.

◦Their prevalence is higher among older individuals and in chronic rheumatoid arthritis (RA), gout, and diabetes mellitus with peripheral neuropathy2.

◦Foot pain and disability can affect workers’ productivity, work absenteeism, and other issues.

◦Pain and disability are subjective complaints,

◦It may causes difficult to quantify without a valid patient report of the degree to which an individual is experiencing foot pain.

Page 4: ANKLE DISABILITY

SCALES TO MEASURE ANKLE DISABILITY

FADI- foot and ankle disability index.

Ankle Osteoarthritis scale

AJFAT-Ankle Joint Functional Assessment Tools

FFI-Foot Function Index

FAAM-Foot And Ankle Ability

MFPDI- Manchester Foot Pain and Disability Index

Page 5: ANKLE DISABILITY

Foot and ankle disability index◦This is designed to assess functional limitations related to foot and ankle conditions 3.

◦The FADI is a region-specific self-report of function with 2 components.

FADI Sport is designed to address this need by detecting deficits in higher functioning subjects ,and it is found more reliable and sensitive and valid to change in subjects with disability mainly in rheumatoid arthritis.

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Questionnaire (FADI)

◦Evidence of content validity is determined by the specific items on the instrument and what they measure.

◦The FADI underwent rigorous psychometric analysis, including analysis with item response theory4.

Page 7: ANKLE DISABILITY

QUESTIONNAIRE5

Page 8: ANKLE DISABILITY

RELIABILITY AND SENSITIVITY

◦ FADI and FADI Sport both are used as a self-report instruments in clinical care and research applications in young adults with CAI.

◦ These instruments appear to be reliable in detecting functional limitations in subjects with CAI.

◦ Sensitive to differences between healthy subjects and subjects with CAI.

◦ FADI Sport appears to be more sensitive at detecting deficits and may be more practical for use among high-functioning individuals.

◦ Subjects scored significantly higher on the Foot and Ankle Disability Index after rehabilitation

Page 9: ANKLE DISABILITY

AJFAT◦ The Ankle Joint Functional Assessment Tool (AJFAT)

It contains 5 impairments

◦ Pain

◦ Stiffness

◦ Stability

◦ strength,

◦ There are , 4 activity related items

◦walking on uneven ground,

◦ cutting when running,

◦ jogging and descending stairs) and 1 overall quality item.

◦ It has 5 answer options. The best total score of the AJFAT is 40

points, the worst possible 0 points.

Page 10: ANKLE DISABILITY

◦ The AJFAT is a 12-item tool that asks participants to choose the answers that best describes their dominant limb ankle using the following scale6.

◦much less than the other ankle,

◦ slightly less than the other ankle,

◦ equal in amount to the other ankle,

◦ slightly more than the other ankle

◦much more than the other ankle.

◦ Each answer is assigned a point value between 0 and 4, and the maximum score on this assessment tool is 48.

Page 11: ANKLE DISABILITY

FAAM

◦An instrument to meet this need: the Foot and Ankle Ability Measure (FAAM).

◦The FAAM was developed to meet the need for a self-reported evaluative instrument that comprehensively assesses physical function of individuals with musculoskeletal disorders of the leg, foot, and ankle7.

◦FAAM score will be required for applications in other settings or over a different time frame. These values also may vary depending on the baseline level of function of the subjects.

Page 12: ANKLE DISABILITY

QUESTIONNAIRE

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Page 14: ANKLE DISABILITY

◦Validity evidence for this instrument needs to be obtained so that scores can be meaningfully interpreted.

◦Interpreting the scores from an evaluative instrument requires evidence .

◦Scores remain stable when the underlying condition measured by the instrument remains stable .

◦Scores are related to other measures of the same or similar construct while not being unduly related to measures of different constructs evidence of convergent and divergent validity).

Page 15: ANKLE DISABILITY

FFI- Foot Function Index◦ The Foot Function Index (FFI) is a self-report, foot-specific instrument measuring pain and disability and has been

widely used to measure foot health for over twenty years8.

◦ It was developed as a self-reporting measure that assesses multiple dimensions of foot function on the basis of patient-centered values.

◦ FFI and/or FFI-R were used as measures of a variety of foot and ankle problems.

◦ The FFI consists of 23 items divided into 3 subscales that measures pain, disability and activity restriction9

Page 16: ANKLE DISABILITY

◦ The FFI pioneered measuring outcomes in foot health.

◦ Instrument has been tested through time and adapted in its measures as it was frequently used in full scales or subscales to measure outcomes in various clinical practice or research studies.

◦ The FFI was recognized as a valid instrument and used as a validation

criterion of other measures.

.

Page 17: ANKLE DISABILITY

Used in:-

◦ It is good scale for patients with foot disorders such as:-

◦ Rheumatoid arthritis

◦Non-traumatic foot or ankle problems.

Page 18: ANKLE DISABILITY

LIMITATIONS

. During the development of the index, clinicians generated the questionnaire items.

◦without patient participation therefore,

◦ items might not fully reflect patients’ needs,

◦might be sex biased , and

◦might not be applicable to high-functioning individuals.

◦ theoretical model was not part of the design, nor were the items related to footwear which are essential to support the construct of this instrument.

Page 19: ANKLE DISABILITY

AII(ANKLE INSTABILITY INSTRUMENT)

The AII was designed specifically for the detection of FAI.

The 16-item questionnaire consists of nine Yes/No questions, six multiple-choice questions, and one open-ended question.9

Question was designed to fit into one of three categories

◦ severity of initial ankle sprain ,

◦ history of ankle instability

◦ instability during activities of dailylife.

Participants who answer ‘yes’ to five or moreYes/No questions were considered to have FAI

Page 20: ANKLE DISABILITY

CAIS( CHRONIC ANKLE INSTABILITY SCALE)

◦ The CAIS is a recently developed 14-item patient-assessed instrument.

◦ The CAIS includes items referring to impairment, disability, participation problems, and emotion.

◦ Each item is scored on a five-point scale, ranging from 4 (best

score) to 0 points (worst score).

Lower scores indicate a lower degree of ankle function while higher scores are indicative of a higher degree of ankle stability.

Page 21: ANKLE DISABILITY

Ankle osteoarthritis scale

Page 22: ANKLE DISABILITY
Page 23: ANKLE DISABILITY

Manchester foot pain and disability index

◦Manchester Foot Pain and Disability Index (MFPDI, 19 items) was developed to measure functional limitations, pain and appearance for patients with foot pain11.

◦The MFPDI is not merely a descriptive tool (e.g. in cross-sectional studies) but it is also used as a tool to measure change over time as a result of an intervention.

◦ One to three weeks later the participants were included in the trial and completed a comprehensive questionnaire with the below mentioned comparator instruments and the MFPDI as a baseline measure me.11

Page 24: ANKLE DISABILITY

◦It is a 19 item tool developed to measure foot pain and foot related function in patients with foot pain .

◦intends to measure 3 constructs: functional limitation, pain and personal appearance .

◦The MFPDI is not merely a descriptive tool (e.g. in cross-sectional studies) but it is also used as a tool to measure change over time as a result of an intervention.

◦To evaluate test-retest reliability

◦One of the 7a prior stated hypotheses about correlations between different change scores

Page 25: ANKLE DISABILITY

Judging the pain in your foot now, compared to three months ago and

Judge the performance of foot

◦related activities now,

◦ compared to three months ago

These questions answered with

◦much

◦worse,

◦ no change, better or much better

Page 26: ANKLE DISABILITY

FAOS

◦ The Foot and Ankle Outcome Score (FAOS) is a 42-item questionnaire divided into 5 subscales12:

◦ Pain other symptoms

◦ activities of daily living

◦ sport and recreation function

◦ foot and ankle related quality of life

◦ subscale pain contains 9 items, the subscale other

◦ symptoms 7 items, the subscale activities of daily living

◦ 17 items, the subscale "sport and recreation function 5 items and the subscale foot and ankle related quality of life 4 items

Page 27: ANKLE DISABILITY

REFERENCES◦1. Sara Muller and Edward Roddy, A rasch analysis of the Manchester foot pain and disability index, Journal of

Foot and Ankle Research2009.

◦2. . Muller* and Edward Roddy, A rasch analysis of the Manchester foot pain and disability index,Sara Journal of Foot and Ankle Research2009.

◦3. Sheri A. Hale, Jay Hertel, Reliability and Sensitivity of the Foot and Ankle Disability Index in Subjects With Chronic Ankle Instability Reliability and Sensitivity of the Foot and Ankle Disability Index in Subjects With Chronic Ankle Instability., Journal of Athletic Training 35,Journal of Athletic Training 2005;40(1):35–40.

◦4. . Sheri A. Hale*; Jay Hertel†, Reliability and Sensitivity of the Foot and Ankle Disability Index in Subjects With Chronic Ankle Instability Reliability and Sensitivity of the Foot and Ankle Disability Index in Subjects With Chronic Ankle Instability., Journal of Athletic Training 35,Journal of Athletic Training 2005;40(1):35–40.

◦5. Martin RL, Burdett RG, Irrgang JJ. Development of the Foot and Ankle Disability Index (FADI) J Orthop Sports Phys Ther. 1999; 29: A32-A33

◦6. Matthew Donahue, MS, ATC; Janet Simon, MS, ATC; Carrie L. Docherty, PhD, ATC ,Critical Review of Self-Reported Functional Ankle Instability Measures, Foot & Ankle International/Vol. 32, No. 12/December 2011

Page 28: ANKLE DISABILITY

◦ 7. Rob Roy L. Martin, P.T., Ph.D., C.S.C.S.1, James J. Irrgang:, Ray G. Burdett, StephenF.Conti, Evidence of Validity for the Foot and Ankle Ability Measure (FAAM), Foot & Ankle International/Vol. 26, No. 11/November 2005.

◦ 8. Elly Budiman-Mak Kendon J Conrad Jessica Mazza and Rodney M Stuck, A review of the foot function index and the foot function index , Budiman-Maket al. Journal of Foot and Ankle Research2013,

◦ 9. Critical Review of Self-Reported Functional Ankle Instability Measures, Foot & Ankle International/Vol. 32, No. 12/December 2011

◦ 10. Dom sic RT, Saltzman CL. Ankle osteoarthritis scale. Foot Ankle Int. 1998;19:466–471, J Orthop Trauma Volume 20, Number 8 Supplement, September 2006

◦ 11. Babette C vander zward ,Caroline B Terwee Edward Roddy Berend Terluin Henriette E van der Horst. Evaluation of the measurement properties of the Manchester foot pain and disability index, van der Zwaardet al. BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders2014,

◦ 12 . Matthew Donahue, MS, ATC; Janet Simon, MS, ATC; Carrie L. Docherty, PhD, ATC. Critical Review of Self-Reported Functional Ankle Instability Measures, Foot & Ankle International/Vol. 32, No. 12/December 2011