Yi-Jing Lue
Kaohsiung Medical University
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Featured researches published by Yi-Jing Lue.
Spine | 2008
Yi-Jing Lue; Ching-Lin Hsieh; Mao-Hsiung Huang; Gau-Tyan Lin; Yen-Mou Lu
Study Design. Cross-cultural adaptation and cross-sectional psychometric testing in a convenience sample of patients with low back pain. Objective. To translate and culturally adapt the Oswestry Disability Index version 2.1 (ODI 2.1) into a Mandarin Chinese version and to assess its reliability and validity. Summary of Background Data. The Chinese ODI 2.1 has not been developed and validated. Methods. The ODI 2.1 was translated and culturally adapted to the Chinese version. The validity of the translated Chinese version was assessed by examining the relationship between the ODI and other well-known measures. Test–retest reliability was examined in 52 of these patients, who completed a second questionnaire within 1 week. Results. Internal consistency of the ODI 2.1 was excellent with Cronbach’s &agr; = 0.903. The intraclass correlation coefficient of test–retest reliability was 0.89. The minimal detectable change was 12.8. The convergent validity of the Chinese ODI is supported by its high correlation with other physical functional status measures (Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire and SF-36 physical functioning subscale, r = 0.76 and −0.75, respectively), and moderate correlation with other measures (Visual Analogue Scale, r = 0.68) and certain SF-36 subscales (role-physical, bodily pain, and social functioning, r range: −0.49 to −0.57). As expected, the ODI was least correlated with nonfunctional measures (SF-36 mental subscale and role-emotional subscale, r = −0.25 and −0.33, respectively). Conclusion. The results of this study indicate that the Chinese version of the ODI 2.1 is a reliable and valid instrument for the measurement of functional status in patients with low back pain.
Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research | 2011
Yen-Mou Lu; Jau-Hong Lin; Shih-Fen Hsiao; Mei-Fang Liu; Shu-Mei Chen; Yi-Jing Lue
Lu, Y-M, Lin, J-H, Hsiao, S-F, Liu, M-F, Chen, S-M, and Lue, Y-J. The relative and absolute reliability of leg muscle strength testing by a handheld dynamometer. J Strength Cond Res 25(4): 1065-1071, 2011-To examine the relative and absolute interrater reliability of handheld dynamometers (HHD) for assessing the lower extremity muscle strength, maximal voluntary contractions (MVCs) of 16 young adults for bilateral hip and knee muscles were tested using the break method. Three MVCs of each muscle group were required for obtaining the muscle strength. Participants muscle strengths were tested by 2 raters. The intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) and the smallest real differences (SRD) were used to examine the relative and absolute reliabilities, and the Bland-Altman analyses were used to check whether systematic bias exists. The results showed that the relative reliabilities of all muscle groups were excellent (ICCs = 0.83-0.92) except for the knee extensors (ICC = 0.60). The SRD represents the smallest difference that indicates a real change for a single subject. The SRD% of all muscle groups was acceptable (ranging from 8.4 to 22.8 %), with the hip extensors being the smallest and knee extensors being the largest. The reliability of the knee extensors was unsatisfactory because of poor relative and absolute reliabilities and systematic bias. In addition to assessing the relative reliability in strength measurement, the absolute reliability provides the data of the measurement error, which is useful information in clinical practice to know whether the change in strength of a subject is real. Hand-held dynamometer is a reliable tool for quantifying most of the hip and knee strength except for the knee extensors. Modifying the measuring technique for knee extension is needed in future studies to improve the reliability.
Clinical Rehabilitation | 2006
Yi-Jing Lue; Chwen-Yng Su; Rei-Cheng Yang; Wei-Lieh Su; Yen-Mou Lu; Rong-Fong Lin; Shun-Sheng Chen
Objective: To develop a reliable and valid new rating scale for measuring the functional impact of muscular dystrophy. Design: Prospective and longitudinal investigation. Setting: Three academic medical centres in Taiwan and the Muscular Dystrophy Association of Taiwan. Measures: The Brooke Scale, the Vignos Scale, the Barthel Index, muscular strength, contracture severity, and predicted forced vital capacity (FVC%). Methods: Scale development was in three stages. In stage I, a preliminary pool of 53 items was generated from patient interviews (n-/25), literature review, existing functional rating scales and expert opinion. In stage II, these items were administered to 85 patients with muscular dystrophy. The resulting data were analysed to construct a rating scale (the Muscular Dystrophy Functional Rating Scale, MDFRS) that encompassed four unidimensional constructs: mobility, basic activities of daily living, arm function and impairment. In stage III, the measurement properties of this rating scale were assessed in 121 muscular dystrophy patients different from those examined with the preliminary instrument. Results: Internal consistency reliability was excellent for all domains of the final 33-item scale, with values of Cronbach’s alpha ranging from 0.84 to 0.97. Intraclass correlation coefficients for test-retest and inter-rater reliability were 0.99 for all domains of the MDFRS. The MDFRS showed moderate to high correlations with a range of functional rating scales measuring similar aspects and impairment parameters (Spearman’s rho=0.65-0.91; P<0.001, each). Confirmatory factor analysis supported a unitary construct of the four-dimensional MDFRS. The MDFRS had small floor and ceiling effects in the study samples. Sensitivity to change was confirmed by large standardized response means for the MDFRS total score. Conclusions: The MDFRS is a reliable and valid disease-specific measure of functional status for patients with muscular dystrophy.
Kaohsiung Journal of Medical Sciences | 2009
Yi-Jing Lue; Rong-Fong Lin; Shun-Sheng Chen; Yen-Mou Lu
Muscular dystrophy (MD) comprises a group of diseases characterized by progressive muscle weakness that induces functional deterioration. Clinical management requires the use of a well‐designed scale to measure patients functional status. This study aimed to investigate the quality of the functional scales used to assess patients with different types of MD. The Brooke scale and the Vignos scale were used to grade arm and leg function, respectively. The Barthel Index was used to evaluate the function of daily living activity. We performed tests to assess the acceptability of these scales. The characteristics of the different types of MD are discussed. This was a multicenter study and included patients diagnosed with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) (classified as severely progressive MD), Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD), limb girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD) and facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD). BMD, LGMD, and FSHD were classified as slowly progressive MD. The results demonstrated that the Brooke scale was acceptable for grading arm function in DMD, but was unable to discriminate between differing levels of severity in slowly progressive MD. The floor effect was large for all types of slowly progressive MD (range, 20.0–61.9), and was especially high for BMD. The floor effect was also large for BMD (23.8%) and FSHD (50.0%) using the Vignos scale. Grades 6–8 of the Vignos scale were inapplicable because they included items involving the use of long leg braces for walking or standing, and some patients did not use long leg braces. In the Barthel Index, a ceiling effect was prominent for slowly progressive MD (58.9%), while a floor effect existed for DMD (17.9%). Among the slowly progressive MDs, FSHD patients had the best level of functioning; they had better leg function and their daily living activities were less affected than patients with other forms of slowly progressive MD. The results of this study demonstrate the acceptability of the different applications used for measuring functional status in patients with different types of MD. Some of the limitations of these measures as applied to MD should be carefully considered, especially in patients with slowly progressive MD. We suggest that these applications be used in combination with other measures, or that a complicated instrument capable of evaluating the various levels of functional status be used.
Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research | 2014
Shih-Fen Hsiao; Pei-Hsi Chou; Horng-Chaung Hsu; Yi-Jing Lue
Abstract Hsiao, S-F, Chou, P-H, Hsu, H-C, and Lue, Y-J. Changes of muscle mechanics associated with anterior cruciate ligament deficiency and reconstruction. J Strength Cond Res 28(2): 390–400, 2014—Isometric and isokinetic knee strength deficits were examined on patients with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury before and after ACL reconstruction. Muscle strengths of the uninjured and injured knees were measured from an ACL injured (n = 12) and a control (n = 15) group. Five isometric (10, 30, 50, 70, and 90° of knee flexion) and 5 isokinetic (50, 100, 150, 200, and 250°·s−1) strengths of quadriceps and hamstrings were measured prereconstruction and postreconstruction (3 and 6 months). Compared with the controls, the uninjured knee showed normal strength and patterns of length-tension and force-velocity relationships. Compared with the uninjured knee, the injured knees showed a generally 25–30% decrease in quadriceps and hamstrings strength with normal patterns of length-tension and force-velocity relationships. By 3 months of reconstruction, weakness of quadriceps of the injured knees was exacerbated, particularly at lengthened positions (∼ 40% of the uninjured knees at knee flexion 70 and 90°) and at slower velocities (∼35% of the uninjured knees at the 50 and 100°·s−1, p < 0.05), with flattened patterns of mechanical output. By 6 months of reconstruction, the quadriceps of the injured knees still showed significant weakness (∼50% of the uninjured knees) in both contraction types (isometric at knee flexion 90° and isokinetic at 50°·s−1, p < 0.05). The hamstrings of the injured knees had not shown significant changes after reconstruction. A strengthening program placing emphasis on greater knee flexion angles and slower movement speed with sufficient training duration post ACL reconstruction is recommended because of long-lasting and exacerbated weakness during 3 and 6 months postreconstruction.
Kaohsiung Journal of Medical Sciences | 2000
Yi-Jing Lue; Jyh-Jong Chang; Hui-Mei Chen; Rong-Fong Lin; Shun-Sheng Chen
Many factors such as anthropometric variables influence strength performance. This study is to determine the relationship between knee isokinetic strength and body composition, and to compare the gender differences. Test-retest reliability had been performed within one week for all measurement methods before the formal study. Fifty-eight 20-25 year-old university students, 32 females and 26 males, participated in this study. Isokinetic strength of the knee flexion and extension was measured at two angular velocities of 60 degrees/sec and 120 degrees/sec. Body composition was measured by bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) and skinfold caliper. The others variables including height, body weight, body mass index (BMI), and waist to hip ratio were measured or calculated. The results showed that the intra-class correlation coefficients for isokinetic knee strength were between 0.83 and 0.93, and body composition and anthropometric variables were between 0.83 and 0.98. Isokinetic knee strength was significantly correlated with body height, body weight, BMI, waist and hip ratio and percent of body fat estimated by skinfold caliper (r = -0.56 to 0.64). The correlation between isokinetic strength with percent of body fat estimated by BIA (r = -0.60 to -0.74; p < 0.001) and with fat free mass (r = 0.64 to 0.78; p < 0.001) was even higher. Although male subjects had significantly greater mean values in body height, body weight, waist to hip ratio and isokinetic strength than female subjects, the MANCOVA showed that the effect of gender on knee isokinetic strength would be eliminated when the covariant variable, the percent of body fat measured by BIA and BMI was controlled in the analysis model. In conclusion, knee isokinetic strength was significantly negatively correlated with proportion of fat and positively correlated with fat free mass. The magnitude of strength difference between males and females could be explained by differences in body fat proportion and BMI in this study. Therapist would take the body fat composition, fat free mass, and BMI into consideration in knee muscle strength measurement. Less body fat and higher BMI will contain more fat free mass that produces more muscle strength.
Health and Quality of Life Outcomes | 2013
Yen-Mou Lu; Yuh-Yih Wu; Ching-Lin Hsieh; Chih-Lung Lin; Shiuh-Lin Hwang; Kuang-I Cheng; Yi-Jing Lue
BackgroundThe Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) is widely used for patients with back pain. However, few studies have examined its psychometric properties using modern measurement theory. The purpose of this study was to investigate the psychometric properties of the ODI in patients with back pain using Rasch analysis.MethodsA total of 408 patients with back pain participated in this cross-sectional study. Patients were recruited from the orthopedic, neurosurgery, rehabilitation departments and pain clinic of two hospitals. Rasch analysis was used to examine the Chinese version of ODI 2.1 for unidimensionality, item difficulty, category function, differential item functioning, and test information.ResultsThe fit statistics showed 10 items of the ODI fitted the model’s expectation as a unidimensional scale. The ODI measured the different levels of functional limitation without skewing toward the lower or higher levels of disability. No significant ceiling and floor effects and gaps among the items were found. The reliability was high and the test information curve demonstrated precise dysfunction estimation.ConclusionsOur results showed that the ODI is a unidimensional questionnaire with high reliability. The ODI can precisely estimate the level of dysfunction, and the item difficulty of the ODI matches the person ability. For clinical application, using logits scores could precisely represent the disability level, and using the item difficulty could help clinicians design progressive programs for patients with back pain.
Kaohsiung Journal of Medical Sciences | 2010
Rong-Fong Lin; Jyh-Jong Chang; Yen-Mou Lu; Mao-Hsiung Huang; Yi-Jing Lue
The purpose of this study was to investigate health‐related quality of life (HRQOL) and associated factors in patients with chronic neck pain (CNP). The HRQOL of patients with CNP was assessed by the Short Form‐36 questionnaire in this cross‐sectional study. To evaluate the psychological factors related to HRQOL, the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire, Chinese Health Questionnaire, and Beck Anxiety Inventory were used. The scores for the eight subscales of Short Form‐36 were all lower than the Taiwanese age‐matched normative values (p < 0.001). The two most strongly affected subscales were the role–physical subscale and the bodily pain sub‐scale; both scores were below half the score of the age‐/sex‐matched normative values. The physical components summary score, a summary measure, was moderately correlated with age (ρ = −0.43), education level (ρ = 0.37) and Beck Anxiety Inventory score (ρ = −0.36). The mental components summary score was moderately to highly correlated with the Chinese Health Questionnaire score (ρ = −0.72), the neuroticism domain of Eysenck Personality Questionnaire (ρ = −0.52) and Beck Anxiety Inventory score (ρ = −0.41). The HRQOL of patients with CNP was worse than that of normal subjects across all domains. Furthermore, patients with a neurotic personality, minor psychiatric morbidity and higher anxiety status showed poor mental health, as measured by the Short Form‐36. We found that patients with CNP had multiple physical and mental health problems in terms of. The mental health of patients with CNP was strongly associated with various psychological factors. Comprehensive assessment of the physical and mental functioning of patients with CNP can improve the management and care of these patients.
Kaohsiung Journal of Medical Sciences | 2000
Yi-Jing Lue; Shun-Sheng Chen
This study was design to reach a better understanding of muscle strength, motor function and activity of daily living in patients of limb-girdle muscular dystrophy. Forty-eight patients diagnosed as cases of limb-girdle muscular dystrophy were included in this study. Manual muscle testing was used to evaluate muscle strength. The Brooke and Vignos scales were used to grade upper and lower extremities function, respectively, and the ability of daily living activity was measured by Barthel index. Our patients showed progressive symmetrical limb-girdle muscular weakness. Upon regression analysis we found that mean muscle strength was inversely related to disease duration (years) as follows: mean muscle strength = 0.6052 + (0.6309/disease duration). According to the Brooke functional scale, 89.6% of our patients were graded as 1-3 and 10.4% were graded as 5. On the Vignos functional scale, 79.1% of patients fell into the grades 1-5, one person (2.1%) in grade 6 and 18.8% in grade 9 category. The average Barthel index was 85.3 +/- 20.7. Mean muscle strength was significantly correlated with the average Barthel, Vignos and Brooke functional scales. Our study could offer the strength and functional performance of limb-girdle muscular dystrophy on natural history. The muscle strength declined in Taiwanese patients of limb-girdle muscular dystrophy in a typical pattern. Regression analysis showed that the strength was inversely related to disease duration. These findings demonstrate that most of our patients suffered from mild or moderate physical disability.
Kaohsiung Journal of Medical Sciences | 2000
Yi-Jing Lue; Shun-Sheng Chen
Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is a slowly progressive myopathy with autosomal dominant inheritance remarkable for its early involvement of facial musculature. The purpose of our study was to assess the rate of strength deterioration, functional condition and performance of activity of daily living of patients with FSHD in Taiwan. Twenty patients diagnosed with FSHD were included in this study. Manual muscle testing (MMT) was used to evaluate muscle strength. The Brooke and Vignos scales were used to assess upper and lower extremity function respectively, and the capability of the activity of daily living was measured by Barthel index. The result of the strength testing was characterized by the presence of a progressive asymmetrical muscular weakness in patients with FSHD. The mean muscular strength of the right extremity was weaker than its left counterparts (p < 0.05) and the shoulder muscle group was the weakest. According to the Brooke functional scale, 20% of our patients were graded as 1, 30% as grade 2, and 50% as grade 3. On the Vignos functional scale, 50% of patients fell into grade 1, 10% in grade 2, and 40% in grades 3-5. Vignos scale was significantly correlated with mean muscle strength (p < 0.05). The average value of Barthel index was 97.8 +/- 4.7. The muscle strength decline in this Taiwanese of FSHD population was more severe in shoulder girdle area. The mean muscle strength of the right extremity was weaker than the left. Most of our patients suffered from mild or moderate physical disability. Finding of these Taiwanese FSHD population is similar to those reported elsewhere in the world.