Erik Poulsen
University of Southern Denmark
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Publication
Featured researches published by Erik Poulsen.
BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders | 2012
Erik Poulsen; Henrik Wulff Christensen; Jeannette Østergaard Penny; Søren Overgaard; Werner Vach; Jan Hartvigsen
BackgroundAssessment of range of motion (ROM) and muscle strength is fundamental in the clinical diagnosis of hip osteoarthritis (OA) but reproducibility of these measurements has mostly involved clinicians from secondary care and has rarely reported agreement parameters. Therefore, the primary objective of the study was to determine the inter-rater reproducibility of ROM and muscle strength measurements. Furthermore, the reliability of the overall assessment of clinical hip OA was evaluated. Reporting is in accordance with proposed guidelines for the reporting of reliability and agreement studies (GRRAS).MethodsIn a university hospital, four blinded raters independently examined patients with unilateral hip OA; two hospital orthopaedists independently examined 48 (24 men) patients and two primary care chiropractors examined 61 patients (29 men). ROM was measured in degrees (deg.) with a standard two-arm goniometer and muscle strength in Newton (N) using a hand-held dynamometer. Reproducibility is reported as agreement and reliability between paired raters of the same profession. Agreement is reported as limits of agreement (LoA) and reliability is reported with intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC). Reliability of the overall assessment of clinical OA is reported as weighted kappa.ResultsBetween orthopaedists, agreement for ROM ranged from LoA [-28–12 deg.] for internal rotation to [-8–13 deg.] for extension. ICC ranged between 0.53 and 0.73, highest for flexion. For muscle strength between orthopaedists, LoA ranged from [-65–47N] for external rotation to [-10 –59N] for flexion. ICC ranged between 0.52 and 0.85, highest for abduction. Between chiropractors, agreement for ROM ranged from LoA [-25–30 deg.] for internal rotation to [-13–21 deg.] for flexion. ICC ranged between 0.14 and 0.79, highest for flexion. For muscle strength between chiropractors, LoA ranged between [-80–20N] for external rotation to [-146–55N] for abduction. ICC ranged between 0.38 and 0.81, highest for flexion. Weighted kappa for the overall assessment of clinical hip OA was 0.52 between orthopaedists and 0.65 between chiropractors.ConclusionsReproducibility of goniometric and dynamometric measurements of ROM and muscle strength in patients with hip OA is poor between experienced orthopaedists and between experienced chiropractors. Orthopaedists and chiropractors can to a moderate degree differentiate between hips with or without osteoarthritis.
Drug Information Journal | 2002
Michael R. Chernick; Erik Poulsen; Yong Wang
Medical device companies report the performance of their products through actuarial survival curves. Analyses are based on “passive” databases. For pacemakers, a significant number of explanted devices may not be reported to manufacturers. Thus, expiant information is lost. High rates of underreporting of failures could result. Therefore, performance curves could indicate better survival rates than those that are actually occurring. Samples of closely-followed patients called active samples are used to adjust survival curves for underreported failures. Through simulations, this paper shows a need for a larger sample size for active components and what degree of underreporting failures would be necessary to assure better estimates using adjustments rather than estimates that ignore adjustments. The issues in this paper have a much broader context as pharmaceutical companies increasingly rely on medical devices to monitor patients ‘ health or deliver drugs. This can also apply to survival curves for adverse events in Phase 4 clinical trials.
Chiropractic & Manual Therapies | 2017
Alice Kongsted; Lise Hestbaek; Carlo Ammendolia; Pierre Côté; Danielle Southerst; Michael Schneider; Brian Budgell; Claire Bombardier; Gillian Hawker; Y. Raja Rampersaud; Corinne Minder; Cynthia K. Peterson; Halldór Fannar Gíslason; Jari Kullervo Salminen; Linn Sandhaugen; Andreas Stenseth Storbråten; Renske Versloot; Inger Rouge; Dave Newell; Ellen Aartun; Hainan Yu; Erik Poulsen; G.H. Gonçalves; Ewa M. Roos; Jonas Bloch Thorlund; Carsten Bogh Juhl; Andreas Eklund; Irene Jensen; Malin Lohela-Karlsson; Jan Hagberg
O-01 Care seeking patterns during one year after visiting a chiropractor Alice Kongsted, Lise Hestbaek Nordic Institute of Chiropractic and Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern Denmark, 5230 Odense M, Denmark; Department of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern Denmark, 5230 Odense M, Denmark Correspondence: Alice Kongsted ([email protected]) Chiropractic & Manual Therapies 2017, 25(Suppl 1):O-01
Osteoarthritis and Cartilage | 2013
Erik Poulsen; Jan Hartvigsen; Henrik Wulff Christensen; Ewa M. Roos; Werner Vach; Søren Overgaard
Manual Therapy | 2010
Mads Hostrup Brunse; Mette Jensen Stochkendahl; Werner Vach; Alice Kongsted; Erik Poulsen; Jan Hartvigsen; Henrik Wulff Christensen
BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders | 2011
Erik Poulsen; Henrik Wulff Christensen; Ewa M. Roos; Werner Vach; Søren Overgaard; Jan Hartvigsen
Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics | 2012
Erik Poulsen; Henrik Wulff Christensen; Søren Overgaard; Jan Hartvigsen
Family Practice | 2016
Erik Poulsen; Søren Overgaard; Jacob Toft Vestergaard; Henrik Wulff Christensen; Jan Hartvigsen
Journal of the Canadian Chiropractic Association | 2015
James Donovan; J. David Cassidy; Carol Cancelliere; Erik Poulsen; Mette Jensen Stochkendahl; Jørgen Kilsgaard; Marc-André Blanchette; Jan Hartvigsen
Osteoarthritis and Cartilage | 2017
Erik Poulsen; G.H. Concalves; Ewa M. Roos; Jonas Bloch Thorlund; Carsten Bogh Juhl