The assessment of cervical sensory motor control: a systematic review focusing on measuring methods and their clinimetric characteristics

Gait Posture. 2013 May;38(1):1-7. doi: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2012.10.007. Epub 2012 Nov 13.

Abstract

Background: Cervical sensorimotor control (CSMC) becomes increasingly important in the assessment and treatment of patients with neck pain. This review aims to compare commonly used CSMC measuring methods in terms of required tasks, measuring device and clinimetric properties.

Search methods: A systematic review of two databases, followed by methodological quality assessment (CBO guidelines).

Results: The methodological quality of 34 included articles was generally good (five to seven out of eight), the inter-rater agreement was excellent (κw=0.966, p<0.01). Following tasks were found: head repositioning accuracy to the neutral head position (HRA-to-NHP) and to a target position (HRA-to-target), a virtual reality test, a continuous linear movement technique (CLMT) and an object following non-linear movement technique (NLMT) (The Fly™). Test-retest reliability was fair to excellent (ICC 0.35-0.87) for the HRA-to-NHP, very bad to excellent (ICC 0.01-0.90) for the HRA-to-target, fair to good (ICC 0.25-0.77) for the virtual reality test and moderate to excellent (ICC: 0.60-0.86) for The Fly™. The reliability of the CLMT was not documented. The HRA-to-NHP, The Fly™ and the CLMT can discriminate between patients with neck complaints and controls (discriminant validity). Currently, only The Fly™ can discriminate between different patient populations (post-traumatic and non-traumatic neck pain). The sensitivity, specificity and responsiveness of the methods have to be assessed in future research.

Conclusions: The dynamic method The Fly™ appears to be more reliable than the HRA-to-NHP and is able to discriminate between different patient populations. The diagnostic potential is to be confirmed in future research.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review
  • Systematic Review

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Motor Skills / physiology
  • Movement / physiology
  • Neck Muscles / physiology
  • Neck Pain / diagnosis*
  • Neck Pain / physiopathology
  • Posture / physiology
  • Proprioception / physiology
  • Range of Motion, Articular / physiology
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Sensitivity and Specificity