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This chapter reviews commonly used scales and outcome instruments that rate athletic and daily functional activities for a variety of knee injuries and disorders in younger active patients. The instruments are analyzed according to their strengths and potential biases as well as their measured reliability, validity, and responsiveness properties. Scales from the Cincinnati Knee Rating System (CKRS) and the International Documentation Committee Rating (IKDC) System are not included because they are described in detail in Chapters 41 and 42 , respectively. Outcome measures typically used in older or sedentary populations with osteoarthritis, patients who undergo total knee arthroplasty (TKA), and individuals with patellofemoral pain are described in Chapter 45 . Generic health status instruments, such as the Short Form-36 Health Survey (SF-36) and the Musculoskeletal Function Assessment, are also available but these are not discussed in this chapter.
It is important to stress that, in our opinion, clinical research studies should include the assessment of symptoms and athletic and daily functional activities, as well as objective physical findings. The determination of patient's outcome using subjective questionnaire data only does not provide an accurate understanding of the ability of the treatment protocol to restore normal knee function. Factors such as range of knee motion, joint effusion, tibiofemoral and patellofemoral crepitus, knee ligament subluxations, radiographic findings, and limb symmetry on functional testing should be included as required according to the diagnosis under study.
Tegner Activity Scale
Classifies both sports and work activities into one questionnaire using an 11-level gradient.
Does not separate sports levels according to frequency of participation or intensity of sport.
Cannot determine change in athletic participation between time periods owing to a change in lifestyle.
Does not detect knee abusers.
Adequate psychometric properties for meniscus injuries, acute patellar dislocations.
Less responsive to change after articular cartilage restorative procedures in comparison with the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score subscales of sport/recreation and quality of life.
Unable to discriminate among patients sufficiently active and those insufficiently active after total knee arthroplasty.
Hospital for Special Surgery Sports Scale
Sports levels sorted according to four stress categories.
Ambiguous terms are used to define sports categories.
Cannot determine change in athletic participation between time periods owing to a change in lifestyle.
Psychometric properties not evaluated.
Seto Sports Participation Survey
Sports activity level and participation rated.
Allows analysis of athletic participation according to frequency of play and the detection of changes in levels between evaluations.
Psychometric properties not evaluated.
Straub and Hunter's Sports Performance Index
Sports index based on rating of participation and intensity levels.
Sports not included in the rating cannot be placed on scale because the rationale for the classification of activities into the various categories is unknown.
Frequency and duration of activities not included.
Knee abusers cannot be detected.
Psychometric properties not evaluated.
Daniel Sports Level Rating
Sports activity rated according to frequency of participation (number of hours played per year) and intensity. Frequency assessed retrospectively.
Knee abusers cannot be detected.
Cannot determine change in athletic participation between time periods owing to a change in lifestyle.
Psychometric properties not evaluated.
Marx Sports Activity Scale
Scale based on frequency of participation and intensity of activities.
Satisfactory reliability, validity.
Unable to discriminate between patients sufficiently active and those insufficiently active after total knee arthroplasty.
Tegner and Lysholm developed one of the first rating scales to quantify activity levels in patients with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) ruptures ( Table 43-1 ). The Tegner Activity Scale classifies both sports and work activities into one questionnaire using an 11-level gradient. Competitive sports make up the top three levels (levels 10-8), competitive and recreational sports categories both appear in level 7, and “other recreational sports” make up level 6 ( Table 43-2 ). Levels 5 through 1 combine work and sports together, and level 0 indicates sick leave or disability because of the knee condition. The original publication did not provide reliability, validity, or responsiveness data of this scale.
Level | Descriptor | Examples of Activities |
---|---|---|
10 | Competitive sports | Soccer: national and international elite |
9 | Competitive sports | Soccer: lower divisions; ice hockey, wrestling, gymnastics |
8 | Competitive sports | Bandy, squash or badminton, athletics (e.g., jumping), downhill skiing |
7 | Competitive sports | Tennis, athletics (running), motocross: speedway, handball, basketball |
Recreational sports | Soccer, bandy and ice hockey, squash, athletics (jumping), cross country, track and field, findings both recreational and competitive | |
6 | Recreational sports | Tennis and badminton, handball, basketball, downhill skiing, jogging at least five times/wk |
5 | Work | Heavy labor (e.g., building, forestry) |
Competitive sports | Cycling | |
Cross-country skiing | ||
Recreational sports | Jogging on uneven ground at least twice/wk | |
4 | Work | Moderately heavy labor (e.g., truck driving, heavy domestic work) |
Recreational sports | Cycling, cross-country skiing, jogging on uneven ground at least twice/wk | |
3 | Work Competitive and recreational sports Walking in forest possible |
Light labor (e.g., nursing) Swimming |
2 | Work Walking on uneven ground possible but impossible to walk in forest |
Light labor |
1 | Work Walking on even ground possible |
Sedentary work |
0 | Sick leave or disability pension because of knee problems |
Scale, Year Published | Factors Rated | Reliability, Validity, Responsiveness Testing | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
Tegner, 1985 |
|
ACL injuries/reconstructions: adequate reliability, content validity, criterion validity, construct validity, responsiveness Meniscus injuries: adequate reliability, content validity, criterion validity, construct validity; moderate responsiveness Acute patellar dislocations: adequate reliability, content validity Articular cartilage repairs: inadequate responsiveness Total knee arthroplasty: adequate reliability, validity |
Developed to compare activity levels before and after treatment. Rationale for assignment of activities to each level unknown. Patients in United States may have difficulty completing scale; designed for European sports. Combines work and sports in 5 of the 11 levels. |
Hospital for Special Surgery, 1987 |
|
Not done | Frequency of participation not assessed |
Seto Sport Participation Survey, 1988 | 13 sports, each assigned 0-4 points (see text). May assign points for activities not listed on scale. Each sport also rated according to frequency and duration of participation: assigned 1-3 points. | Not done | Allows detection of knee abusers, change in activity levels between evaluations. Reporting of data may be difficult if a population is composed of individuals who play a wide variety of sports because data are sorted according to each activity separately. |
Straub & Hunter's Sport Performance Index, 1988 |
|
Not done | Only certain sports listed on performance index scale. Sports not rated according to frequency and duration of participation. Rationale for classification of sports in levels 1-5 not given. |
Daniel Sports Activity Rating, 1994 |
|
Not done | Assessed frequency of participation; total hr/yr estimated retrospectively |
Marx Sports Activity Scale, 2001 | 4 factors: running, cutting, decelerating, pivoting Each factor rated according to frequency of participation: <1 time/mo, 1 time/mo, 1 time/wk, 2-3 times/wk, >3 times/wk |
Reliability ICC = 0.97. Validity: face, content, construct, divergent; acceptable, correlated with three other sports activity scales Responsiveness testing not done Scale showed inverse correlation with age |
Tested in 40 normal subjects. No category available for low-impact activities (swimming, bicycling, low-impact aerobics). |
High-Activity Arthroplasty Score, 2010 | 4 factors: walking, running, stair climbing, general activities; patient selects highest level of function in each domain, sum equals score | High internal consistency Validity: correlated with four other scales Reliability using ICC, responsiveness testing not done |
Tested in 22 patients, pilot study |
Several problems are incurred with this activity rating instrument. First, work activities are rated within the same scale as sports activities. Patients who work in heavy-labor occupations are only awarded a level 5 (out of a possible 10), but the analysis of the stress on the lower limb in some of these occupations would probably show that these knees are functioning at a level equivalent to those of competitive athletes. They should not be awarded a lower level simply because they are not athletes or did not return to highly competitive sports. Athletics and occupational activities should be measured on separate rating scales (see Chapter 41 ).
Second, this scale does not separate various sports levels according to frequency of participation or the intensity of the sport, which is determined by accounting for the forces placed on the lower extremity. For instance, only national and international elite soccer players are listed on level 10, whereas basketball is listed on a level 7. In the United States, it could be argued that competitive high school, collegiate, or professional basketball players are asked to place similar demands on the knee joint and lower extremity as elite soccer players. For patients who play or return to sports not listed on the scale, problems are incurred in trying to determine exactly which level accurately defines their sport. Third, this scale does not allow an assessment of a change in athletic participation between time periods owing to a change in lifestyle (e.g., graduated from school and no longer participates in a league). In addition, one cannot detect knee abusers in either the sport or the work levels.
Independent investigations assessed the reliability, validity and responsiveness of the Tegner scale for a variety of knee injuries. Briggs and coworkers determined its reliability, validity, and responsiveness in 122 patients with meniscus injuries. The scale was found to have adequate reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient [ICC], 0.817), content validity (no ceiling or floor effects), criterion validity with the Medical Outcomes Short Form-12 Health Survey (SF-12), and construct validity. However, only moderate effect sizes (ES) and standardized response mean (SRM) values were reported. The investigators concluded that the scale measures only moderate changes in activity levels, and noted that patients in the United States may have difficulty completing the scale because it was designed for sports commonly played in Europe.
Paxton and associates assessed the reliability and validity of this scale in 153 patients followed 2 to 5 years after an acute patellar dislocation. The scale was found to have adequate reliability (ICC, 0.92) and content validity. Briggs and colleagues found the Tegner scale had adequate reliability, validity, and responsiveness following ACL injury and reconstruction.
Ebert and associates reported that the Tegner scale was less responsive to change following articular cartilage restorative procedures in comparison with the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) subscales of sport/recreation and quality of life. There was no strong evidence that a change in the Tegner scale was associated with patient satisfaction of the outcome of the operation. A systematic review of the use of the Tegner scale following articular cartilage repair procedures found that the majority of studies reported means values only, where nonparametric methods would be more relevant. The investigators concluded that if the instruments is used in a nonstandardized or inappropriate manner, its value as a clinical outcome measure will be compromised.
Naal and coworkers compared data from three activity rating scales (Tegner, University of California, Los Angeles [UCLA], and Marx Activity Rating Scale ) in patients who underwent total joint arthroplasty. Physical activity was assessed using the “last 7 days” version of the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ). The Tegner scale was found to be reliable and had acceptable validity in patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty (TKA). However, this scale had lower correlation coefficients and lower completion rates than the UCLA scale and was unable to discriminate between patients who were sufficiently active (moderate and vigorous activity levels according to IPAQ classification) and those who were insufficiently active.
Hanley and Warren developed the Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) knee assessment instrument for an investigation of 48 patients with ACL-deficient knees who underwent arthroscopic partial meniscectomy. The instrument includes a scale composed of four levels of various sports ranked “very stressful,” “moderately stressful,” “mildly stressful,” and “no sports activities.” Examples of sports are provided in categories A, B, and C to assist with the ratings. The advantages of this scale include the assessment of sports activities only (separately from occupations) and the attempt to sort sports participation according to the level of intensity. The problems with this scale are that ambiguous terms are used to rate the sports categories (“very stressful” may have different meanings to different patients), an assessment of reasons for change in athletics owing to non–knee-related reasons is not provided, and the detection of knee abusers is not possible. The authors did not conduct reliability, validity, or responsiveness testing of their outcome instrument.
Seto and associates developed a sports participation survey to determine activity levels in 19 patients who had undergone ACL reconstruction. In this survey, subjects rate their activity level for 13 sports, which are divided into cutting and noncutting categories. Each sports activity receives 0 to 4 points.
4 = full activity with no significant signs or symptoms
3 = full activity with occasional or recurring mild episodes of pain, swelling, or instability
2 = limited activity because of moderate or severe episodes of pain, swelling, or instability
1 = does not participate in activity because of the injured knee
0 = does not participate in activity but not because of the injured knee
Patients also rate their sports participation according to frequency and duration as either competitive (6 to 7 times/week or regular participation in organized competition, 3 points), recreational (3 to 5 times/week, or 2 times/week and more than 2 hours/session, or seasonal sports 5 days or more/months, 2 points), or weekend (1 to 2 times/week for 1 hour or participation in seasonal sports ≤4 days/months, 1 point).
This scale allows the analysis of athletic participation according to frequency of play and the detection of changes in activity levels between evaluations. Knee abusers may be identified from the categories of “mild” or “moderate” symptoms occurring with activity. Because the activity level is rated per sport, reporting of data can be difficult if a population is composed of individuals who play a wide variety of sports. Reliability, validity, and responsiveness testing were not conducted on this survey.
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