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Thoracic Spine and Shoulder Kinematics and Muscle Activation in Rock Climbers with Shoulder Pain

N

National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Shoulder Pain
Shoulder Impingement Syndrome

Treatments

Device: Electromagnetic tracking system, surface electromyography

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05950360
NYCU112095AE

Details and patient eligibility

About

Background and Purpose: Rock climbing has been a popular sport in recent years. Rock climbing includes various open-chain and closed-chain arm movements. Overhead reaching and pull-up are the basic rock climbing elements heavily involving upper extremities. Different inclination of the wall and terrain also demand sufficient range of motion and strength of the trunk. Generally overhead reaching and arm elevation may have similar shoulder kinematics, including scapular upward rotation, posterior tilt and external rotation. Arm elevation usually is accompanied with thoracic extension and unilateral lateral flexion and rotation. During pull-up, the scapula rotates downward and externally and tilts anterior. The prevalence of shoulder injuries are about 17%, the second most common among rock climbing injuries. In the shoulder injuries, shoulder labrum lesions and shoulder impingement are the most common. Previous studies have shown that individuals with shoulder impingement syndrome have shown decreased upward and externally rotation during arm elevation, and have limited thoracic extension range of motion and greater kyphotic posture. However, a previous study found no difference in the scapular kinematics and scapular muscle activation during pull-up in rock climbers with shoulder pain and healthy climbers. The non-significant finding may be due to that the pure pull-up may not mimic climbing tasks, in which the shoulder and trunk need to adapt different inclination of the wall. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to investigate the kinematics and muscle activation of the thoracic spine and shoulder in rock climbers with shoulder pain during climbing tasks with different reaching angles. Methods: Thirty sport climbers with shoulder pain and 30 healthy climbers matched with gender, age, and dominant hand will be recruited in this study. Testing tasks will include arm elevation in the scapular plane, overhead reaching to the target 15° backward to the frontal plane, pull-up with overhead reaching forward and backward. Thoracic and shoulder kinematics will be collected using an electromagnetic tracking system. The upper trapezius, lower trapezius, serratus anterior, latissimus dorsi, and erector spinae were collected with surface electromyography (EMG). A two-way mixed ANOVA will be used to determine differences between groups in the kinematics and EMG measures at the different arm elevation angles for the testing tasks.

Enrollment

37 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 40 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria of Patients with Shoulder Pain:

  1. Ages ranges from 18-40 years old
  2. At least one year of experience of sport climbing
  3. Sport Climbing frequency ≥ 6 hours per week in the last one month
  4. Shoulder pain ≥ 1 month
  5. Minimum of 3/10 on the numerical rating scale (NRS) in the last one month

Inclusion Criteria of Healthy Subjects in the control group:

  1. Ages ranges from 18-40 years old
  2. Gender, age, dominant hand and experience matching to shoulder pain climbers group
  3. At least one year of experience of sport climbing
  4. Sport Climbing at least 6 hours per week in the last one month
  5. No history of shoulder pain in the last six months

Exclusion Criteria of Patients with Shoulder Pain and All Healthy Subjects

  1. History of upper limb surgery or fracture
  2. History of shoulder dislocation
  3. History of neck pain, back pain, or elbow injuries in the last one year
  4. Wrist or finger pain during sport climbing > 3/10 on the numerical rating scale (NRS)
  5. Shoulder pain during pull-up > shoulder pain during sport climbing
  6. Intensive exercise within 12 hours or any delay onset muscle soreness
  7. Systemic autoimmune disease
  8. Cancer
  9. Pregnancy

Trial design

37 participants in 2 patient groups

rock climbers (healthy group)
Description:
Climbers without shoulder pain
Treatment:
Device: Electromagnetic tracking system, surface electromyography
rock climbers (shoulder pain group)
Description:
Climbers with shoulder pain
Treatment:
Device: Electromagnetic tracking system, surface electromyography

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

GUAN-XUAN WU; YIN-LIANG LIN

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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