Compartir
Título
Reliability of a Method to Measure Neck Surface Electromyography, Kinematics, and Pain Occurrence in Participants With Neck Pain
Autor
Facultad/Centro
Área de conocimiento
Título de la revista
Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics
Número de la revista
5
Cita Bibliográfica
Lascurain-Aguirrebeña, I., Newham, D. J., Irazusta, J., Seco, J., & Critchley, D. J. (2018). Reliability of a Method to Measure Neck Surface Electromyography, Kinematics, and Pain Occurrence in Participants With Neck Pain. Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics, 41(5), 413-424. https://doi.org/10.1016/J.JMPT.2017.10.013
Editorial
Elsevier
Fecha
2018
ISSN
0161-4754
Resumen
[EN] Objective: To investigate the reliability of a novel method to measure neck surface electromyography (SEMG), kinematics, and pain during active movements in participants with neck pain. Methods: This test-retest study evaluated 23 participants with chronic neck pain. Each was measured twice within a single session. Three-dimensional kinematics and SEMG were recorded in 10° increments during forward and side flexion, extension, and rotation of the neck. Neck position during pain occurrence was also measured. Results: Intraclass correlation coefficients were >0.80 for 96% and 100% of SEMG and kinematic data, respectively. The percentage of standard error of the measurement (SEM) values were <25% for 91% of all SEMG measures; most were <15%, and some were <10%. For ranges of motion in the primary plane, percentage of SEM values were all <6% (SEM 1°-3°). Intraclass correlation coefficients for neck position during pain occurrence were all >0.60, except for right rotation (0.48) (SEM values 2°-8°). Pain occurred approximately 59% to 75% into the total range of motion and persisted to its end. Conclusions: This methodology showed good reliability. It may be suitable for neck pain subclassification to evaluate the effects of treatment on pain, kinematics, and muscle activity during functional neck movements. The point of pain occurrence suggests increasing mechanical load on tissues may be one of the causative factors for movement-associated neck pain.
Materia
Palabras clave
Peer review
SI
URI
DOI
Aparece en las colecciones
- Artículos [5045]
Ficheros en el ítem
Nombre:
Tamaño:
23.41
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.size-kilobytes
Formato:
Adobe PDF