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A comparison of computer-assisted and manual wound size measurement.

TLDR
To examine the reliability and validity of a new computerized technique for measuring human and animal wounds, chronic human wounds and surgical animal wounds were assessed using manual and computerized techniques.
Abstract
Accurate and precise wound measurements are a critical component of every wound assessment. To examine the reliability and validity of a new computerized technique for measuring human and animal wounds, chronic human wounds (N = 45) and surgical animal wounds (N = 38) were assessed using manual and computerized techniques. Using intraclass correlation coefficients, intrarater and interrater reliability of surface area measurements obtained using the computerized technique were compared to those obtained using acetate tracings and planimetry. A single measurement of surface area using either technique produced excellent intrarater and interrater reliability for both human and animal wounds, but the computerized technique was more precise than the manual technique for measuring the surface area of animal wounds. For both types of wounds and measurement techniques, intrarater and interrater reliability improved when the average of three repeated measurements was obtained. The precision of each technique with human wounds and the precision of the manual technique with animal wounds also improved when three repeated measurement results were averaged. Concurrent validity between the two techniques was excellent for human wounds but poor for the smaller animal wounds, regardless of whether single or the average of three repeated surface area measurements was used. The computerized technique permits reliable and valid assessment of the surface area of both human and animal wounds.

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Citations
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MEASURE: A proposed assessment framework for developing best practice recommendations for wound assessment.

TL;DR: This article, which resulted from a meeting of wound healing experts in June 2003, reviews clinically useful wound measurement approaches, provides an overview of the principles and practice of chronic wound assessment geared to a clinical audience, and introduces a simple mnemonic, MEASURE.
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Effect of electrical stimulation on chronic leg ulcer size and appearance.

TL;DR: The results of the study indicate that HVPC administered 3 times a week should be considered to accelerate wound closure of chronic leg ulcers.
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Randomized trial and local biological effect of autologous platelets used as adjuvant therapy for chronic venous leg ulcers.

TL;DR: Topical autologous platelets have no significant adjuvant effect on healing of chronic venous leg ulcers and increased wound fluid TIMP-1 concentration and ulcer healing is associated with a decrease in wound fluid IL-8.
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A comparison of wound area measurement techniques: visitrak versus photography.

TL;DR: The photographic method is an accurate alternative to Visitrak for measuring wound area, with no statistical difference in wound area measurement demonstrated during this study.
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Measuring wound length, width, and area: which technique?

TL;DR: This continuing education activity is intended for physicians and nurses with an interest in wound care to provide practitioners with evidence-based recommendations for measuring wound size.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Intraclass correlations: uses in assessing rater reliability.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present guidelines for choosing among six different forms of the intraclass correlation for reliability studies in which n target are rated by k judges, and the confidence intervals for each of the forms are reviewed.
Book

Health Measurement Scales: A Practical Guide to Their Development and Use

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose three basic concepts: devising the items, selecting the items and selecting the responses, from items to scales, reliability and validity of the responses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical Methodology for the Concurrent Assessment of Interrater and Intrarater Reliability: Using Goniometric Measurements as an Example

TL;DR: It is recommended that when both interrater and intrarater reliability are being assessed, a repeated-measures design be used to take advantage of the increased precision gained by using all observations in the statistical analysis, and appropriate statistical tests, confidence intervals, and SEMs always be used in conjunction with the estimated reliability coefficients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reliability of wound surface area measurements.

TL;DR: The results of this study indicate that intratester and intertester wound measurements can be taken reliably with the graph paper, planimeter, and digitizer methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stereophotogrammetry for measuring rates of cutaneous healing: a comparison with conventional techniques.

TL;DR: St stereophotogrammetry is the only system which can validly be used to study rates of healing in this model and is also able to measure volume to within 5% and is unique in being able to do this noninvasively.
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