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The Foot and Ankle Ability Measure (FAAM) is Translated From English to Turkish and Assess the Validity and Reliability in Athletic Population Who Have Foot and Ankle Disorders.

Completed
Conditions
Ankle; Injury, Superficial, Multiple (With Foot)
Registration Number
NCT03259750
Lead Sponsor
Serkan Usgu
Brief Summary

Sport activity induces a relevant risk for lower extremities especially ankle and foot structures. Athletes who participate in basketball, volleyball and soccer are predisposed. Self-reported outcome instruments have been used by clinicians to assess the treatment interventions effectiveness directed at patients with pathologies and identify impairments, disabilities and quality of life. The assessment of musculoskeletal injuries can be problem without clinical, radiological examination and on scores from patient-based questionnaires. The information from these questionnaires provides us good evidence if there is not interpretation of obtained scores. The Foot and Ankle Ability Measure (FAAM) is a self-reported outcome instrument for patients with foot and ankle disorders available in English, German, and French. The FAAM has a sports subscale and activity of daily living (ADL) subscale that can assess the activities that requires higher level. The aim of this study is to translate the FAAM into Turkish language, perform a cross-cultural adaptation, and investigate the reliability, validity of the translated version in athletic population

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
51
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Participants should be professional athletes

  2. Age ranges must be 18-40 years old

  3. Clinical diagnosis of ankle and foot injury

    1. Acute condition
    2. Chronic condition
  4. Injuries must to happened in sport activities.

Exclusion Criteria
  1. If athletes had injuries to hip, knee, lower leg within the previous 6 months before the study.

  2. The history of surgery to the above-mentioned areas.

  3. Coexisting musculoskeletal injuries in other body parts, or chronic conditions.

    1. Systematic diseases
    2. Neurological or vascular conditions.
    3. Alcohol abuse
    4. Psychiatric disorders

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
FAAM-T questionnaire3 days

The FAAM-T is comprised of separately scored 21-item Activity of Daily Living (ADL) and 8-item Sports subscales. Each item is scored on a five-point Likert scale from 4 to 0, item score totals can be varied from 0 to 84 for the ADL and from 0 to 32 for the sports subscale. The percentage scores calculated with the total score of each subscale is divided by the highest potential score and multiplied by 100.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Visual Analogue Scale3 days

Visual analogue scale (VAS) is used to represent pain and also functional limitation in sport. The VAS includes numbers, words, figures, to recognize the patients rate the pain or functional limitation level. Responses were converted to numerical scores by measuring the distance from the zero point to the vertical mark. This distance was recorded to the nearest millimeter.

6 meters shuttle run3 days

Participants sprinted up and back twice along a 6 meters course. Participants were required to start with one leg forward on the start line. Time started from the initial forward movement of the athlete and stopped when the athlete crossed the line. Each participants was timed with a hand-held stopwatch and recorded in second.

Triple forward hop3 days

Participants were asked to face parallel down the test "runway," and, when signaled, participant hopped as far as possible in the forward direction with 3 consecutive hops on the same leg. The distance between the starting line and the place where participant lands on the third hop measured at the heel was recorded in centimeters

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Hasan Kalyoncu University

🇹🇷

Gaziantep, Şahinbey, Turkey

Hasan Kalyoncu University
🇹🇷Gaziantep, Şahinbey, Turkey

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