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Correlation Between Posterior Oblique Sling Activation and Contralateral Glenohumeral Stability in Low Back Pain

S

Shaimaa Ramadan Ibrahim Abdul-ghani El Deab

Status

Completed

Conditions

Chronic Low-back Pain

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05050695
P.T.REC/012/001843

Details and patient eligibility

About

Objective: This study will be conducted to investigate the relationship between the amplitude of posterior oblique sling muscles; ipsilateral gluteus maximus (GM) and contralateral latissmus Dorsi (LD), and the amount of anterior translation of humeral head (ATHH) of the contralateral glenohumeral joint (GHJ) in subjects with unilateral chronic low back pain (CLBP) during ipsilateral prone knee extension (PHE) test. Methods: The study will be conducted on thirty subjects (15 patients with CLBP and 15 healthy subjects). Ipsilateral GM and contralateral LD amplitude will be recorded by surface EMG during PHE of the limb at the painful side and correlated to ATHH of contralateral GHJ as measured by ultrasonography. Hypothesis: There won't be a significant relationship between the amplitude of posterior oblique sling muscles (GM and contralateral LD) during PHE for the ipsilateral leg and the amount of ATHH of the contralateral GHJ in patients with unilateral CLBP.

Full description

Demographic data will be collected from all subjects regarding age, weight, height, and body mass index. After patient selection according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria, measuring the amplitude of gluteus maximus (GM) and contralateral latissmus dorsi (LD) muscles during prone hip extension (PHE) for the ipsilateral leg to the symptoms in unilateral CLBP patients and for the selected leg in matched controls will be carried out using surface electromyography (EMG) unit. Then ultrasonography unit will be used to assess the amount of anterior translation of humeral head (ATHH) of contralateral glenohumeral joint for both groups.

Before placement of the EMG electrodes, the skin at the anatomic landmarks will be shaved (if required), rubbed, and cleaned with isopropyl alcohol 70% to remove excess oils and debris.

The electrodes will be sterilized and placed on the muscle belly oriented parallel to the muscle fiber away from the tendon and muscle edges with the inter-electrodes distance of two centimeters. The electrodes will be secured by adhesive tape. Before recording, skin impedance will be checked to be less than 5 KΩ.

The electrodes for LD will be placed 4 cm below the inferior tip of the scapula and half the distance between the spine and the lateral edge of the torso. For GM, electrodes will be placed at half the distance between the greater trochanter and second sacral vertebra and at an oblique angle at, or slightly above, the level of the trochanter.

The two normalization procedures will be the typical maximal voluntary isometric contraction (MVIC) performed as per SENIAM Guidelines (www.seniam.org), and submaximal voluntary contraction (sub-MVC) task will be performed using the prone double leg raise. It is recommended to avoid maximal contractions of the GM muscle, because reproduction of pain on testing would have possibly invalidated the use of the root mean square (RMS) values for normalization.

For the sub-MVC of GM, the subjects will be asked to lift both knees 5 cm off the examination table while the knees should be flexed at 90 and held them for 5 seconds in a prone position. Three trials will be performed with 30 seconds rest in between.

For MVIC of LD muscle, the subjects will be in prone position and the side being tested is aligned with the edge of the plinth, with the shoulder and upper extremity off the plinth. The subjects will be asked to flex the elbow and manual isometric resistance will be applied at distal humerus during shoulder extension and adduction and the contraction held for 5 seconds, the middle 3 seconds will be used for the analysis. Stabilization will be applied to the ipsilateral scapula and trunk. Three trials were performed with 30 seconds rest in between.

For recording during PHE, all subjects will be instructed about active PHE and The target angle was set at 10 degrees to control the amount of hip extension using a goniometer. A 30 seconds rest period will be provided between each trial.

Ultrasonography assessment: the patient will be assessed in a sitting position and the shoulder will be placed in internal rotation then the position will be maintained by a sling. Two therapists are needed to assess humeral translation.

Enrollment

30 patients

Sex

All

Ages

20 to 50 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria for CLBP group:

  1. Patients age between 20-50yrs
  2. Patients with chronic low back pain (pain > 3 months).
  3. Patients with unilateral symptoms (facet, disc, SIJ dysfunction) will be referred by an orthopedic physician with or without referral to the leg.

Inclusion Criteria for the healthy control group:

  1. matched controls in terms of age, weight, height, and BMI.

Exclusion Criteria for both groups:

  1. History of shoulder pain 3 months ago.
  2. History of any shoulder pathology.
  3. Congenital pathology affecting the spine or shoulder.
  4. Any neurological disorder.
  5. Non-mechanical LBP (e.g., fracture, malignancy, infection)
  6. Difficulty performing the PHE task because of weakness in the GM or the test provokes pain.
  7. BMI 30 or higher as fat tissue may decrease the ability to measure surface EMG activity

Trial design

30 participants in 2 patient groups

Subjects with unilateral chronic low back pain
Description:
Subjects with low back pain for more than 3 months on one side of the spine
Healthy subjects
Description:
Subjects without a history of low back pain

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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