The seventh cervical vertebra is an appropriate landmark for thoracic kyphosis measures using distance from the wall

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Abstract

Background: Hyperkyphosis is frequently found nowadays due to the change in current lifestyles and age-related system decline. A simple hyperkyphosis measurement can be made easily using the perpendicular distance from the landmark to the wall. However, the existing evidence applied two different landmarks [occiput and the seventh cervical vertebra (C7)] and the measurement using rulers was susceptible to error due to their misalignment. Objective: To assess an appropriate landmark for thoracic kyphosis measurement using distance from the wall (KMD), by comparing between occiput and C7, as measured using rulers and verified using data from a specially developed machine, the so-called infrared-gun kyphosis wall distance tool (IG-KypDisT), and the Cobb angles. Methods: Community-dwelling individuals with a risk of thoracic hyperkyphosis (age ≥10 years, n = 43) were cross-sectionally assessed for their thoracic hyperkyphosis using the perpendicular distance from the landmarks, occiput and C7, to the wall using rulers and IG-KypDisT. Then the Cobb angles of these participants were measured within seven days. Results: The outcomes from both landmarks differed by approximately 0.8cm (p = 0.084). The outcomes derived from C7 were more reliable (ICCs>0.93, p<0.001), with greater concurrent validity with the radiologic data (r = 0.738, p<0.001), with the overall variance predicted by the regression models for the Cobb angles being higher than that from the occiput (47-48% from C7 and 38-39% from occiput). The outcomes derived from rulers and IG-KypDisT showed no significant differences. Conclusion: The present findings support the reliability and validity of KMD assessments at C7 using rulers as a simple standard measure of thoracic hyperkyphosis that can be used in various clinical, community, and research settings.

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Wiyanad, A., Amatachaya, S., Amatachaya, P., Suwannarat, P., Chokphukiao, P., Sooknuan, T., & Gaogasigam, C. (2023). The seventh cervical vertebra is an appropriate landmark for thoracic kyphosis measures using distance from the wall. Hong Kong Physiotherapy Journal, 43(1), 43–51. https://doi.org/10.1142/S1013702523500038

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