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Physical Activity, Health and Exercise

Validity and reliability of a low-cost dynamometer to assess maximal isometric strength of upper limb

Low cost dynamometry and isometric strength of upper limb

, , , & ORCID Icon
Pages 1787-1793 | Accepted 28 Jan 2019, Published online: 21 Mar 2019
 

ABSTRACT

Muscle imbalance and deficit are key parameters for guiding rehabilitation and sports sessions and avoiding injuries. However, the high cost and non-portable nature of most instruments employed for muscle strength assessment frequently hamper an affordable evaluation in field conditions. This study evaluated the validity and reliability of a low-cost digital dynamometer to assess the maximal isometric strength of upper limb muscles. Fourteen physically active volunteers performed the main movements of the upper limb at maximal isometric strength: flexion-extension, internal-external rotation and abduction-adduction of the shoulder; and flexion-extension of both elbow and wrist. Validity was examined by comparing the strength values from the low-cost digital dynamometer and those measured by an isokinetic dynamometer, assumed as the gold standard. The correlation between both devices was perfect (r > 0.913), while Bland-Altman plots showed absolute agreement between both devices, the maximum range of the values of bias was −0.99–1.00 N in wrist extension. Inter-tester and intra-tester reliability were excellent for all movements (ICC ≥ 0.855). The low-cost digital dynamometer showed strong validity and excellent reliability in assessing maximal isometric strength during the main movements of the upper limb. Professionals may use it for an affordable isometric muscle strength assessment in field situations.

Acknowledgements

Authors would like to thank all the participants from Palma de Mallorca who spent their time to participate in this study.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

Authors do not have any funding to declare.

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