scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Anglo-European College of Chiropractic

EducationBournemouth, Dorset, United Kingdom
About: Anglo-European College of Chiropractic is a education organization based out in Bournemouth, Dorset, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Chiropractic & Back pain. The organization has 177 authors who have published 293 publications receiving 7430 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study provides a methodological framework for identifying clinically significant change in patients and has important implications in providing clinically relevant information about the effect of a treatment intervention in an individual patient.

489 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The reliability, validity and radiation exposure levels in a new Objective Spinal Motion Imaging Assessment system (OSMIA) based on low-dose fluoroscopy and image processing can measure inter-vertebral angular motion patterns in routine clinical settings if modern image intensifier systems are used.
Abstract: Minimally-invasive measurement of continuous inter-vertebral motion in clinical settings is difficult to achieve. This paper describes the reliability, validity and radiation exposure levels in a new Objective Spinal Motion Imaging Assessment system (OSMIA) based on low-dose fluoroscopy and image processing. Fluoroscopic sequences in coronal and sagittal planes were obtained from 2 calibration models using dry lumbar vertebrae, plus the lumbar spines of 30 asymptomatic volunteers. Calibration model 1 (mobile) was screened upright, in 7 inter-vertebral positions. The volunteers and calibration model 2 (fixed) were screened on a motorised table comprising 2 horizontal sections, one of which moved through 80 degrees. Model 2 was screened during motion 5 times and the L2-S1 levels of the volunteers twice. Images were digitised at 5fps. Inter-vertebral motion from model 1 was compared to its pre-settings to investigate accuracy. For volunteers and model 2, the first digitised image in each sequence was marked with templates. Vertebrae were tracked throughout the motion using automated frame-to-frame registration. For each frame, vertebral angles were subtracted giving inter-vertebral motion graphs. Volunteer data were acquired twice on the same day and analysed by two blinded observers. The root-mean-square (RMS) differences between paired data were used as the measure of reliability. RMS difference between reference and computed inter-vertebral angles in model 1 was 0.32 degrees for side-bending and 0.52 degrees for flexion-extension. For model 2, X-ray positioning contributed more to the variance of range measurement than did automated registration. For volunteer image sequences, RMS inter-observer variation in intervertebral motion range in the coronal plane was 1.86 degreesand intra-subject biological variation was between 2.75 degrees and 2.91 degrees. RMS inter-observer variation in the sagittal plane was 1.94 degrees. Radiation dosages in each view were below the levels recommended for a plain film. OSMIA can measure inter-vertebral angular motion patterns in routine clinical settings if modern image intensifier systems are used. It requires skilful radiography to achieve optimal positioning and dose limitation. Reliability in individual subjects can be judged from the variance of their averaged inter-vertebral angles and by observing automated image registration.

225 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Multi-site chronic pain is more common than single- site chronic pain and is commonly associated with other problems and may often be inappropriate for research and care on single sites, in a representative UK sample.
Abstract: Objective. To investigate the frequency and health impact of chronic multi-site musculoskeletal pain, in a representative UK sample. Method. Population postal questionnaire survey, using 16 general practices in the southeast of England, nationally representative urban/ rural, ethnic and socioeconomic mix. A random selection of 4049 registered patients, aged 18 or over, were sent a questionnaire. The main outcome measures were chronic pain location, identified using a pain drawing; distress, pain intensity and disability as measured by the GHQ12 and the Chronic Pain Grade. Results. A total of 2445 patients (60%) responded to the survey (44% male, mean age 52 yrs); 45% had chronic musculoskeletal pain. Of those with chronic pain, three quarters had pain in multiple sites (two or more sites). Variables significantly predicting this were: age under 55, [odds ratio (OR) 0.5, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.4, 0.6]; psychological distress (OR 1.8, CI at 95% 1.4, 2.2) and high pain intensity (OR 5.2, CI at 95% 4.1, 6.7). Only 33% of multi-site pain distributions conformed to the American College of Rheumatology definition of chronic widespread pain. Conclusions. Multi-site chronic pain is more common than single-site chronic pain and is commonly associated with other problems. Indiscriminate targeting of research and care for chronic musculoskeletal pain on single sites may often be inappropriate.

218 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The neck BQ covers the salient dimensions of the biopsychosocial model of pain, is quick and easy to complete, and has been shown to be reliable, valid, and responsive to clinically significant change in patients with nonspecific neck pain.

216 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: This scale is recommended for pain intensity measurement in most types of outcome studies, and asking patients to report their usual pain levels, rather than current levels, enhances the responsiveness of the measures and is a more representative perspective of their pain experience.

214 citations


Authors

Showing all 177 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Nadine E. Foster6832018475
Deborah Ashby6123311733
Beverly S. Mitchell541578482
Tamar Pincus381286732
Alan Breen311224278
Karen M. Knapp22951415
Steven Vogel22723232
Peter W. McCarthy21851918
Jennifer E. Bolton19401608
Dave Newell1549894
Richard C. Foreman1423900
Haymo Thiel1126520
Jeff Bagust1123446
Jonathan Field1021348
Hugh Gemmell1017393
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital
2.2K papers, 75.5K citations

74% related

Arthritis Research UK
1.1K papers, 55.4K citations

71% related

American Physical Therapy Association
15.4K papers, 350.4K citations

69% related

University of Brighton
9.9K papers, 277.8K citations

69% related

Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre
2.9K papers, 145.7K citations

68% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20202
20192
20182
20178
201614
201516