1. Muscle Contraction Has a Reduced Effect on Increasing Glenohumeral Stability in the Apprehension Position
- Author
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Emma M. Baillargeon, Amee L. Seitz, Constantine P Nicolozakes, Daniel Ludvig, and Eric J. Perreault
- Subjects
Adult ,Joint Instability ,Male ,musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Isometric exercise ,Article ,Young Adult ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Sex Characteristics ,Apprehension ,Shoulder Joint ,business.industry ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,body regions ,Position (obstetrics) ,Robotic systems ,Torque ,Athletic Injuries ,Shoulder instability ,Female ,Shoulder Injuries ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Maximum torque ,Muscle Contraction ,Resultant force ,Muscle contraction - Abstract
PURPOSE Glenohumeral instability accounts for 23% of all shoulder injuries among collegiate athletes. The apprehension position-combined shoulder abduction and external rotation-commonly reproduces symptoms in athletes with instability. Rehabilitation aims to increase glenohumeral stability by strengthening functional positions. However, it is unclear how much glenohumeral stability increases with muscle contraction in the apprehension position. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the ability to increase translational glenohumeral stiffness, a quantitative measure of glenohumeral stability, with muscle contraction is reduced in the apprehension position. METHODS Seventeen asymptomatic adults participated. A precision-instrumented robotic system applied pseudorandom, anterior-posterior displacements to translate the humeral head within the glenoid fossa and measured the resultant forces as participants produced isometric shoulder torques. Measurements were made in neutral abduction (90° abduction/0° external rotation) and apprehension (90° abduction/90° external rotation) positions. Glenohumeral stiffness was estimated from the relationship between applied displacements and resultant forces. The ability to increase glenohumeral stiffness with increasing torque magnitude was compared between positions. RESULTS On average, participants increased glenohumeral stiffness from passive levels by 91% in the neutral abduction position and only 64% in the apprehension position while producing 10% of maximum torque production. The biggest decrease in the ability to modulate glenohumeral stiffness in the apprehension position was observed for torques generated in abduction (49% lower, P < 0.001) and horizontal abduction (25% lower, P < 0.001). CONCLUSION Our results demonstrate that individuals are less able to increase glenohumeral stiffness with muscle contraction in the apprehension position compared with a neutral shoulder position. These results may help explain why individuals with shoulder instability more frequently experience symptoms in the apprehension position compared with neutral shoulder positions.
- Published
- 2021
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