Determining the stabilizing role of individual torso muscles during rehabilitation exercises

A systematic biomechanical analysis involving an artificial perturbation applied to individual lumbar muscles in order to assess their potential stabilizing role. To identify which torso muscles stabilize the spine during different loading conditions and to identify possible mechanisms of function....

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Veröffentlicht in:Spine (Philadelphia, Pa. 1976) Pa. 1976), 2004-06, Vol.29 (11), p.1254-1265
Hauptverfasser: KAVCIC, Natasa, GRENIER, Sylvain, MCGILL, Stuart M
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container_issue 11
container_start_page 1254
container_title Spine (Philadelphia, Pa. 1976)
container_volume 29
creator KAVCIC, Natasa
GRENIER, Sylvain
MCGILL, Stuart M
description A systematic biomechanical analysis involving an artificial perturbation applied to individual lumbar muscles in order to assess their potential stabilizing role. To identify which torso muscles stabilize the spine during different loading conditions and to identify possible mechanisms of function. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA.: Stabilization exercises are thought to train muscle patterns that ensure spine stability; however, little quantification and no consensus exists as to which muscles contribute to stability. Spine kinematics, external forces, and 14 channels of torso electromyography were recorded for seven stabilization exercises in order to capture the individual motor control strategies adopted by different people. Data were input into a detailed model of the lumbar spine to quantify spine joint forces and stability. The EMG signal for a particular muscle was replaced either unilaterally or bilaterally by a sinusoid, and the resultant change in the stability index was quantified. A direction-dependent-stabilizing role was noticed in the larger, multisegmental muscles, whereas a specific subtle efficiency to generate stability was observed for the smaller, intersegmental spinal muscles. No single muscle dominated in the enhancement of spine stability, and their individual roles were continuously changing across tasks. Clinically, if the goal is to train for stability, enhancing motor patterns that incorporate many muscles rather than targeting just a few is justifiable.
doi_str_mv 10.1097/00007632-200406010-00016
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source Journals@Ovid Ovid Autoload; MEDLINE
subjects Adult
Biological and medical sciences
Biomechanical Phenomena
Cerebrospinal fluid. Meninges. Spinal cord
Electromyography
Exercise Therapy
Humans
Lumbar Vertebrae - physiology
Male
Medical sciences
Muscle, Skeletal - physiology
Nervous system (semeiology, syndromes)
Neurology
Spinal Diseases - rehabilitation
title Determining the stabilizing role of individual torso muscles during rehabilitation exercises
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