The Relationship Between Pectus Deformities and Spinal Pathologies
- Conditions
- Spinal DeformityPectus Deformity of Chest
- Interventions
- Diagnostic Test: Pectus Study FormDiagnostic Test: Adams TestDiagnostic Test: Scoliosis GraphyDiagnostic Test: Pulmonary function test
- Registration Number
- NCT06009601
- Lead Sponsor
- Gaziosmanpasa Research and Education Hospital
- Brief Summary
Pectus deformities are common anterior chest wall pathologies. Pectus excavatum is the most common chest deformity with an incidence of 0.1-0.3%. Although the incidence of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) is 0.2-3% in the community, some studies show that this rate rises to 17.61-25.58% when it is associated with pectus deformity. While the pectus excavatum rotates the heart to the left with its ribs and cartilages, it pushes the thoracic vertebra to the right side with the internal counterforce created by the heart, which has been shown to push the spine to the right with an asymmetric horizontal force in scoliosis patients with pectus deformity.
Based on this, in study, investigators aimed to determine whether there is any relationship between pectus deformities and spinal pathologies, and if there is a relationship, with which pathology it is most common, whether the type of scoliosis seen in pectus deformities with a prominent scoliosis prevalence is a pectus-specific curve, and whether this curve seen in scoliosis is associated with pectus. To determine whether there is a footprint or not.
- Detailed Description
The study was planned as a prospective cross-sectional study. Pectus study forms consisting of clinical and radiological measurements of the patients aged 3-18 years who applied to the outpatient clinic with chest deformity will be filled in in detail, and the Adams test (forward bending test) (+) will be measured by Bunnell scoliometer (scoliosis assessment tool) and ATR (angle of trunk rotation- trunk rotation) measurements. If ATR measurement is above 7 degrees on Bunnell scoliometer, patients who meet the inclusion criteria will be included in the study by filling in the informed consent form and a scoliosis radiograph will be requested (Independent of investigators' study, it is necessary to withdraw it in line with the 2016 recommendations of the International Scientific Society for Scoliosis Orthopedic and Rehabilitation Treatment (SOSORT).)
Coronal, sagittal balance, coronal and sagittal cobb angles will be measured from the scoliosis radiograph taken from the Posterior-Anterior (PA) (posterior-anterior) and lateral (side) films. Their relationship with chest deformities will be evaluated. All measurements will be made and recorded by two independent investigators As a result of the analysis, when the power is targeted as 95% and the error amount as 0.05, the minimum sample size required for investigators to find a significant difference between the means was determined as 36. Investigators formed a sample group of 40 people for our study, together with the fact that groups of 36 people were sufficient in terms of providing 95% power. Kappa statistical analysis will be used to determine intraobserver and interobserver variations.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 40
- Being diagnosed with pectus deformity
- Be between 3-18 years old
- Adult type scoliosis
- Congenital scoliosis
- Neuromuscular scoliosis
- Syndromic scoliosis
- Infantile idiopathic scoliosis
- Having surgery to the chest wall or spine
- People with connective tissue disease will not be included in the study.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Patients aged 3-18 years who were diagnosed with pectus deformity Adams Test Pectus study forms consisting of clinical and radiological measurements of patients aged 3-18 years who applied to the outpatient clinic with chest deformity will be filled in in detail. Patients aged 3-18 years who were diagnosed with pectus deformity Scoliosis Graphy Pectus study forms consisting of clinical and radiological measurements of patients aged 3-18 years who applied to the outpatient clinic with chest deformity will be filled in in detail. Patients aged 3-18 years who were diagnosed with pectus deformity Pectus Study Form Pectus study forms consisting of clinical and radiological measurements of patients aged 3-18 years who applied to the outpatient clinic with chest deformity will be filled in in detail. Patients aged 3-18 years who were diagnosed with pectus deformity Pulmonary function test Pectus study forms consisting of clinical and radiological measurements of patients aged 3-18 years who applied to the outpatient clinic with chest deformity will be filled in in detail.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Pectus Study Form Within 1 week of applying to the scoliosis outpatient clinic In the Pectus Study Form, the clinical and radiological data of the patient will be evaluated. Coronal, sagittal balance and coronal and sagittal cobb angles of the patient will be measured in the scoliosis X-ray.
Body Aesthetic Clinical Evaluation (TRACE) Within 1 week of applying to the scoliosis outpatient clinic Body Aesthetic Clinical Evaluation (TRACE) measurement will be performed.TRACE is a 12-point scale based on four sub-scales, shoulders (0-3), scapulae (0-2), hemi-thorax (0-2) and waist (0-4)
Pulmonary Function Test (PFT) Within 1 week of applying to the scoliosis outpatient clinic Pulmonary function test measurements will be made for people with pectus deformity.Pulmonary function tests, or PFTs, measure how well the lungs work. For some of the test measurements, the client can breathe normally and quietly. Other tests require forced inhalation or exhalation after a deep breath. Sometimes, they will be asked to inhale a different gas or a medicine to see how it changes test results.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Quality of Life Evaluation Form in Pectus Deformity Within 1 week of applying to the scoliosis outpatient clinic This questionnaire, a self-assessment one, will assist clinicians who wish to assess body image and quality of life of patients with Pectus deformity. The PEEQ is a questionnaire used to assess the disease-specific quality of life of patients with PE and their parents. The questionnaire contains 12 items and the parent form contains 13 items. Each item receives a score between 1 and 4, with higher scores indicating a better quality of life. The questionnaire has subscales that indicate psychosocial and physical quality of life for both children and parents. The questions from 1 to 9 in the child form ask about psycho-social quality of life, while the questions 10-12 ask about physical quality of life. In the parents form, the questions from 1 to 8 ask about psychosocial quality of life, while the questions from 9 to13 ask about physical quality of life.
Beck Anxiety Scale Within 1 week of applying to the scoliosis outpatient clinic The Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI), created by Aaron T. Beck and other colleagues, is a 21-question multiple-choice self-report inventory that is used for measuring the severity of anxiety in adolescents and adults ages 17 and older.The BAI contains 21 questions, each answer being scored on a scale value of 0 (not at all) to 3 (severely). Higher total scores indicate more severe anxiety symptoms. The standardized cutoffs are:0-7: Minimal, 8-15: Mild, 16-25: Moderate,and 26-63: Severe
The Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory Within 1 week of applying to the scoliosis outpatient clinic The Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL) is a 23-item generic health status instrument with parent and child forms that assesses five domains of health (physical functioning, emotional functioning, psychosocial functioning, social functioning, and school functioning) in children and adolescents ages 2 to 18. Each item of the instrument is scored on a 5-point scale from 0- 4 for ages 8-18, (0 = never a problem, 1 = almost never a problem, 2 = sometimes a problem, 3 = often a problem, 4 = almost always a problem) ad 3-point scale for young child self reporting (ages 5- 7) as following (0 = not at all a problem, 2 = sometimes a problem, 4 = a lot of a problem) the large score means worst symptoms , scores are linearly transformed to a 0-100 scale (0 = 100, 1 = 75, 2 = 50, 3 = 25, 4 = 0) in which high score means better condition
Scoliosis Research Society Score Within 1 week of applying to the scoliosis outpatient clinic The SRS-22r is a validated questionnaire intended to assess outcomes in patients with idiopathic scoliosis after spinal surgery. The first version, developed by the Scoliosis Research Society in 1999, had 24 items, and this was reduced to 22 items (accompanied by a name change) in the course of 3 major updates.The SRS-22 contains 22 questions covering 5 domains: function/activity 5 items; pain 5 items; self-perceived image 5 items; mental health 5 items; and satisfaction with treatment 2 items. Each item is scored from 1 (worst) to 5 (best). Each domain has a total sum score ranging from 5 to 25, except for satisfaction, which ranges from 2 to 10. The sum of the first 4 domains gives a maximum subtotal of 100, and when the satisfaction domain is included, the maximum total is 110
Social Comparison Scale Within 1 week of applying to the scoliosis outpatient clinic This scale was developed by Allan and Gilbert (1995) to measure self-perceptions of social rank and relative social standing. This scale uses a semantic differential methodology and consists of 11 bipolar constructs. Participants are required to make a global comparison of themselves in relation to other people and to rate themselves along a ten-point scale. For example' the scale asks:
In relationship to others I feel: Incompetent -\>1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 \<- More competent The 11-items cover judgments concerned with rank' attractiveness and how well the person thinks they 'fit in' with others in society. Low scores point to feelings of inferiority and general low rank self-perceptions.Sleep Disorder Scale for Children Within 1 week of applying to the scoliosis outpatient clinic Sleep Disorder Scale for Children (SDSC) was designed both to evaluate specific sleep disorders in children, and to provide an overall measure of sleep disturbance suitable for use in clinical screening and research. Using factor analysis, developers Bruni and colleagues divided items into six categories representing some of the most common sleep diffi culties affecting adolescents and children: disorders of initiating and maintaining sleep, sleep breathing disorders, disorders of arousal/nightmares, sleep-wake transition disorders, disorders of excessive somnolence, and sleep hyperhidrosis (nighttime sweating).
Anxiety Disorders Screening Scale in Children Within 1 week of applying to the scoliosis outpatient clinic Anxiety Disorders Screening Scale in Children (SCARED) is a child self-report instrument used to screen for childhood anxiety disorders including general anxiety disorder, separation anxiety disorder, panic disorder and social phobia. The SCARED consists of 41 items and 5 factors that parallel the DSM-IV classification of anxiety disorders.The Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders (SCARED) assesses a range of DSM-IV based anxiety symptomatology. More specifically, it taps symptoms of panic disorder (13 items), generalised anxiety disorder (9 items), social phobia (9 items), separation anxiety disorder (12 items), obsessive-compulsive disorder (9 items), post-traumatic stress disorder (4 items), and specific phobia (15 items). The SCARED-71 consists of 71 items rated on a three-point scale (0 = almost never, 1 = sometimes, 2 = often). The minimum score that could be obtained is 0 and the maximum score that could be obtained is 142.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Deniz
🇹🇷Gazi̇osmanpaşa, İstanbul, Turkey