A study of five cervicocephalic relocation tests in three different subject groups


Autoria(s): Kristjansson, E; Dall'Alba, P; Jull, G
Contribuinte(s)

Dr. Derick Wade

Data(s)

01/01/2003

Resumo

Objective: To compare head relocation accuracy in traumatic ( whiplash), insidious onset neck pain patients and asymptomatic subjects when targeting a natural head posture (NHP) and complex predetermined positions. Design: A case-control study. Setting: University-based musculoskeletal research clinic. Participants: Sixty-three volunteers divided into three groups of similar gender and age: Group 1 (n=21) an asymptomatic group; group 2 (n=20) insidious onset neck pain; group 3 (n=22) a history of whiplash injury. Intervention: Five randomly ordered tests designed to detect relocation accuracy of the head. Outcome measures: A 3-Space Fastrak system measured the mean absolute relocation error of three trials of each relocation test. Results: A significant difference was found between groups in one of the tests targeting the NHP (p=0.001). Post-hoc pairwise comparisons revealed a significant difference (pless than or equal to0.05) between the asymptomatic group and each symptomatic group. The difference between the symptomatic groups just failed to reach significance (p=0.07). None of the other four tests revealed significant differences. Conclusion: The test of targeting the NHP indicates that relocation inaccuracy exists in patients with neck pain with a trend to suggest that the deficit may be greater in whiplash patients. Tests employing unfamiliar postures or more complex movement were not successful in differentiating subject groups.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:64547

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Arnold Journals, Turpin Distribution Services Ltd

Palavras-Chave #Rehabilitation #Equilibrium-point Control #Kinesthetic Sensibility #Whiplash Injury #Joint Movements #Position #System #Pain #Proprioception #Models #Single #C1 #321024 Rehabilitation and Therapy - Occupational and Physical #730114 Skeletal system and disorders (incl. arthritis)
Tipo

Journal Article