Linguistic tones in MRI reports correlate with severity of pathology for rotator cuff tendinopathy

被引:0
|
作者
Kim, Eugene [1 ]
Table, Billy [1 ]
Ring, David [1 ]
Fatehi, Amirreza [1 ]
Crijns, Tom Joris [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas Austin, Dell Med Sch, Dept Surg & Perioperat Care, 1701 Trinity St, Austin, TX 78705 USA
关键词
Linguistic inquiry and word count; Radiology reports; Variation; Rotator cuff; Tendinopathy; WORDS;
D O I
10.1007/s00402-022-04543-w
中图分类号
R826.8 [整形外科学]; R782.2 [口腔颌面部整形外科学]; R726.2 [小儿整形外科学]; R62 [整形外科学(修复外科学)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background Written communication can convey one's emotions, personality, and sentiments. Radiology reports employ medical jargon and serve to document a patients' condition. Patients might misinterpret this medical jargon in a way that increases their anxiety and makes them feel unwell. We were interested whether linguistic tones in MRI reports vary between radiologists and correlate with the severity of pathology. Questions/Purposes (1) Is there variation in linguistic tones among different radiologists reporting MRI results for rotator cuff tendinopathy? (2) Is the retraction of the supraspinatus tendon in millimeters associated with linguistic tones? Methods Two hundred twenty consecutive MRI reports of patients with full-thickness rotator cuff defects were collected. Supraspinatus retraction was measured on the MRI using viewer tools. Using Kruskal-Wallis H tests, we measured variation between 11 radiologists for the following tones: positive emotion, negative emotion, analytical thinking, cause, insight, tentativeness, certainty, and informal speech. We also measured the correlation of tones and the degree of tendon retraction. Multilevel mixed-effects linear regression models were constructed, seeking factors associated with the tone, accounting for retraction, the presence of prior imaging, and for the effects of each radiologist (nesting). Results There were statistically significant differences for all of the tones by radiologist. In bivariate analysis, greater retraction of the supraspinatus muscle in millimeters was associated with more negative emotion and certainty, and with less tentativeness. In multilevel mixed-effects linear regression, more negative tones were associated with greater retraction and absence of prior imaging. Greater tentativeness was associated with the absence of prior imaging, but not with retraction. Conclusions Radiology reports have emotional content that is relatively negative, varies by radiologist and is affected by pathology. Strategies for more hopeful, positive, optimistic descriptions of pathology have the potential to help patients feel better without introducing inaccuracies even if unlikely.
引用
收藏
页码:3753 / 3758
页数:6
相关论文
共 30 条
  • [1] Linguistic tones in MRI reports correlate with severity of pathology for rotator cuff tendinopathy
    Eugene Kim
    Billy Table
    David Ring
    Amirreza Fatehi
    Tom Joris Crijns
    Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery, 2023, 143 : 3753 - 3758
  • [2] Rotator cuff tendinopathy: immunohistochemical changes across the spectrum of pathology
    Murphy, R. J.
    Kliskey, K.
    Wheway, K.
    Watkins, E. B.
    Beard, D. J.
    Carr, A. J.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PATHOLOGY, 2013, 94 (04) : A9 - A9
  • [3] Rotator cuff tendinopathy: a model for the continuum of pathology and related management
    Lewis, Jeremy S.
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE, 2010, 44 (13) : 918 - 923
  • [4] Rotator cuff tendinopathy: magnitude of incapability is associated with greater symptoms of depression rather than pathology severity
    Rohrback, Mitchell
    Ramtin, Sina
    Abdelaziz, Abed
    Matkin, Lars
    Ring, David
    Crijns, Tom J.
    Johnson, Anthony
    JOURNAL OF SHOULDER AND ELBOW SURGERY, 2022, 31 (10) : 2134 - 2139
  • [5] Symptoms of Pain Do Not Correlate with Rotator Cuff Tear Severity
    Dunn, Warren R.
    Kuhn, John E.
    Sanders, Rosemary
    An, Qi
    Baumgarten, Keith M.
    Bishop, Julie Y.
    Brophy, Robert H.
    Carey, James L.
    Holloway, G. Brian
    Jones, Grant L.
    Ma, C. Benjamin
    Marx, Robert G.
    McCarty, Eric C.
    Poddar, Sourav K.
    Smith, Matthew V.
    Spencer, Edwin E.
    Vidal, Armando F.
    Wolf, Brian R.
    Wright, Rick W.
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND JOINT SURGERY-AMERICAN VOLUME, 2014, 96A (10): : 793 - 800
  • [6] MRI ANALYSIS OF THE ROTATOR CUFF PATHOLOGY - A NEW CLASSIFICATION
    TAVERNIER, T
    WALCH, G
    NOEL, E
    LAPRA, C
    BOCHU, M
    JOURNAL DE RADIOLOGIE, 1995, 76 (05): : 251 - 257
  • [7] Shoulder Ultrasound vs MRI for Rotator Cuff Pathology
    Teefey, Sharlene A.
    Petersen, Brian
    Prather, Heidi
    PM&R, 2009, 1 (05) : 490 - 493
  • [8] Rotator cuff pathology of the shoulder: US vs MRI
    Barile, A.
    Catalucci, A.
    Carducci, A.
    Masciocchi, C.
    Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology, 2000, 26 (SUPPL. 2):
  • [9] Shoulder Ultrasound vs MRI for Rotator Cuff Pathology Response
    Petersen, Brian D.
    PM&R, 2009, 1 (05) : 493 - 494
  • [10] IMAGING OF ROTATOR CUFF PATHOLOGY- IS ULTRASOUND AS GOOD AS MRI
    Alagappan, Vinoth
    Prabhu, Nirmal Kumar
    Moorthy, Srikanth
    Pullara, Sreekumar Karumathil
    Ramesh, Rajesh Kanann
    Nazar, P. K.
    Kulkarni, Chinmay
    Chandrasekharan, Rajsekar
    JOURNAL OF EVOLUTION OF MEDICAL AND DENTAL SCIENCES-JEMDS, 2015, 4 (100): : 16567 - 16572