Pelvic girdle pain and relevance of ASLR testing: A ... - Cindy Verheul
Pelvic girdle pain and relevance of ASLR testing: A ... - Cindy Verheul
Pelvic girdle pain and relevance of ASLR testing: A ... - Cindy Verheul
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Figure 7: Hypothesis 2: Different scores <strong>of</strong> the negative instability group<br />
35%<br />
30%<br />
25%<br />
20%<br />
15%<br />
10%<br />
5%<br />
0%<br />
Conclusion:<br />
56 % <strong>of</strong> the women with a positive instability score had a negative score on the <strong>ASLR</strong>, <strong>and</strong> a<br />
positive score on the DPQ<br />
This illustrates that also via this hypothesis that the test <strong>ASLR</strong> alone is insufficient to<br />
demonstrate instability.<br />
5.2.3 Hypothesis 3<br />
H0: There is no difference between women who scored positive on different stability tests for<br />
the pelvis excluding the <strong>ASLR</strong> <strong>and</strong> women with negative scores on different stability tests for<br />
the pelvis with the <strong>ASLR</strong>.<br />
Total score:<br />
The number <strong>of</strong> women who score positive on one or more <strong>of</strong> the pelvic instability <strong>testing</strong><br />
without the <strong>ASLR</strong> test is 18. The rest scores negative (see table 22 <strong>and</strong> related figure 8).<br />
Table 22: Hypothesis 3: Characteristic groups based on other instability tests<br />
Characteristic groups based on<br />
other instability tests<br />
Negative instability group:<br />
0% 0%<br />
Positive <strong>ASLR</strong> Positive <strong>ASLR</strong> <strong>and</strong><br />
Positive DPQ<br />
Negative <strong>ASLR</strong> <strong>and</strong><br />
Positive DPQ<br />
Number %<br />
Positive 18 45%<br />
Negative 22 55%<br />
Osteopathie Schule Deutschl<strong>and</strong><br />
Dresden International University Page 57<br />
33%