Author/Authors :
Naghdi، Soofia نويسنده Department of Physiotherapy, School of Rehabilitation,
Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, IR
Iran , , Nakhostin Ansari، Noureddin نويسنده Department of Physiotherapy, School of Rehabilitation,
Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, IR
Iran , , Ashrafi، Hanieh نويسنده Department of Physiotherapy, School of Rehabilitation,
Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, IR
Iran , , Entezary، Ebrahim نويسنده Department of Physiotherapy, School of Rehabilitation,
Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, IR
Iran , , Nakhostin Ansari، Amin نويسنده School of Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences,
Tehran, IR Iran , , Olyaei، Gholamreza نويسنده Department of Physiotherapy, School of Rehabilitation,
Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, IR
Iran ,
Abstract :
A clinical outcome tool is needed for the assessment of young athletes with low back pain. To translate and culturally adapt the Micheli functional scale (MFS), a self-report questionnaire developed to evaluate young athletes with low back pain (LBP) into Persian language and examine the reliability and validity of the Persian MFS (PMFS). A cross-sectional study was conducted to assess the psychometric properties of the PMFS. The PMFS was cross-culturally adapted into Persian language adopting forward/backward translation, expert panel review, and pre-testing. The PMFS was administered to young athletes with and without LBP. Main outcome measures were Persian MFS, Persian functional rating Index (PFRI), and visual analogue scale (VAS). A sample of 100 young athletes with LBP with a mean age of 16.5 ± 2.5 years participated. Fifty young athletes without LBP completed the PMFS. There was no missing responses and floor or ceiling effects. There was a significant difference for the total PMFS scores between young athletes with and without LBP. A significant correlation was found between the total PMFS score and the VAS (r = 0.92) or the PFRI (r = 0.82; P < 0.001). A high internal consistency reliability (Cronbach ? = 0.73), and excellent test-retest reliability (ICCagreement = 0.99, P < 0.001) were demonstrated for the PMFS. Factor analysis indicated a single-factor model for PMFS scores. The Persian MFS is valid and reliable for use in Persian-speaking young athletes with LBP