A critique of a UK standardized test of finger rewarming after cold provocation in the diagnosis and staging of hand-arm vibration syndrome
- PMID: 12890832
- DOI: 10.1093/occmed/kqg096
A critique of a UK standardized test of finger rewarming after cold provocation in the diagnosis and staging of hand-arm vibration syndrome
Abstract
Background: Accurate diagnosis and staging of hand-arm vibration syndrome (HAVS) is important in health surveillance of vibration-exposed workers and the substantial number of related medico-legal cases. The measurement of the rewarming rate of fingers after cold provocation to the hands (CPT) has been suggested as a useful test in diagnosing HAVS.
Aim: To investigate the diagnostic value of a standardized version of the CPT test using a 15 degrees C cold challenge for 5 min applied in the recent compensation assessment of UK miners.
Methods: Analysis of a subset of UK miners assessed at our unit, together with data from a small repeatability study of the standardized CPT in normal subjects.
Results: Rewarming time in the CPT was significantly lower in those subjects classified as vascular Stockholm stage 0 compared with Stockholm stages 1-3 combined, but did not discriminate between the stages of abnormality. Using the suggested cut-off in the CPT test, the sensitivity and specificity were calculated as 43 and 78%, respectively. Receiver operator characteristic analysis suggested that the rewarming time of highest accuracy gave a sensitivity of 66% and specificity of 59%. In 10 miners who reported unilateral hand blanching, there was no significant difference in CPT measurements between blanching and non-blanching hands. Repeat CPT measurements in normal subjects suggested mean differences of 52 and 107 s for each hand, and the Bland-Altman coefficient of repeatability was approximately 600 s for all fingers.
Conclusion: Single application of this standardized CPT test may have limited value in diagnosing the vascular component of HAVS in an individual.
Comment in
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'The hand-arm vibration syndrome'--a prevention challenge or a price to pay?Occup Med (Lond). 2003 Aug;53(5):299-301. doi: 10.1093/occmed/kqg086. Occup Med (Lond). 2003. PMID: 12890827 No abstract available.
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Hand-arm vibration syndrome.Occup Med (Lond). 2004 Mar;54(2):128-30; author reply 130-3; discussion 133. doi: 10.1093/occmed/kqh024. Occup Med (Lond). 2004. PMID: 15020732 No abstract available.
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