Effect of positioning and bracing on passive position sense of shoulder joint.

BRITISH JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE(2004)

Cited 37|Views1
No score
Abstract
Objective: To examine the effects of positioning and sleeve type bracing on passive position sense of shoulder joints of healthy untrained subjects. Method: A cross over study was carried out on 26 subjects (13 male, 13 female) with a proprioception measurement device. The selected method of testing was passive reproduction of a target angle. Both shoulder joints of all the subjects were evaluated with and without a compressive neoprene sleeve type of brace at two different start positions (45degrees internal rotation, 75degrees external rotation) with an angular rotational movement at a constant speed of 0.5degrees/s. The angular displacements from the target angles at the end of the reproduction tests were recorded as position sense deficit scores. Results: The overall mean (SD) deficit score (0.99 (0.06)) was significantly (p<0.001) lower with the brace than without, and the overall mean deficit score was significantly (p<0.001) higher at the 45degrees internal rotation start position than at the 75 external rotation start position. However, there was no significant (p>0.05) interaction between brace application and start position. Conclusion: Terminal limits of range of motion facilitate the position sense of shoulder joints. Compressive brace application improves the passive positioning sense possibly by stimulating cutaneous mechanoreceptors.
More
Translated text
Key words
rotation,analysis of variance,proprioception,supine position
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined