Research Article

Reliability and Validity Measurement of Sagittal Lumbosacral Quiet Standing Posture with a Smartphone Application in a Mixed Population of 183 College Students and Personnel

Table 2

Comparison of results of this with one previously performed similar study using the smartphone application “iHandy Level” in healthy populations.
(a) Angle data in degrees [mean (SD)]. Lumbar curves and sacral slopes differed significantly between male and female participants

Salamh and Kolber [20]Current study

GenderMixed ()Male )Female ()Total ()Male-female mean difference

Lumbar curve°32-3328.37 (7.19)34.21 31.56 (10.01)5.84
Sacral slope°17.80 (6.82)22.99 20.64 (8.59)5.18

, significantly different to male values.
(b) Intrarater reliability statistics

Salamh and Kolber [20]Current study

GenderMixed ()Male ()Female ()Total ()

(95% CI)SEM° (95% CI)SEM° (95% CI)SEM° (95% CI)SEM°

Lumbar curve0.81 (0.61–0.91)370.93 (0.89–0.95)2.025.590.96 (0.95–0.97)2.236.170.96 (0.94–0.97)2.135.9
Sacral slope0.95 (0.93–0.96)1.574.350.97 (0.96–0.98)1.634.510.97 (0.96–0.97)1.614.46

ICC: Intraclass Correlation Coefficient; SEM: Standard Error of the Measurement; MDC: Minimum Detectable Change.