مرکز اطلاعات علمی Scientific Information Database (SID) - Trusted Source for Research and Academic Resources

Persian Verion

Scientific Information Database (SID) - Trusted Source for Research and Academic Resources

video

Scientific Information Database (SID) - Trusted Source for Research and Academic Resources

sound

Scientific Information Database (SID) - Trusted Source for Research and Academic Resources

Persian Version

Scientific Information Database (SID) - Trusted Source for Research and Academic Resources

View:

1,432
Scientific Information Database (SID) - Trusted Source for Research and Academic Resources

Download:

0
Scientific Information Database (SID) - Trusted Source for Research and Academic Resources

Cites:

1

Information Journal Paper

Title

THE STUDY OF PREVALENCE AND CAUSES OF SHOULDER INJURIES IN RELATIONSHIP TO PAIN AND STRENGTH IN ELITE WHEELCHAIR BASKETBALL PLAYERS

Pages

  73-84

Abstract

 Shoulder, elbow, wrist and finger PAIN is common and persistent problem among wheelchair transfers. The shoulder as most common site of PAIN has been reported in paraplegia (31 to 73%). The purpose of this research was to study the PAIN, STRENGTH and shoulder pathology and also the relationship between variables in wheelchair basketball elite players and nonathletic wheelchair users. 25 elite players BASKETBALL WHEELCHAIR (age 37.20±5.72 yr) and 25 nonathletic wheelchair users (age 36.58±4.35 yr) participated in this study. Demographic information, sport activity level, disability and medical records were collected by questionnaire, interviews and medical files. Then shoulder PAIN by wheelchair users PAIN index (r=0.99) and muscle STRENGTH by handheld dynamometer were assessed. Continued ROTATOR CUFF IMPINGEMENT SYNDROME by Neer test, anterior instability by Load & Shift test and BICEPS TENDONITIS by Speeds test were evaluated. Correlation coefficient and independent t test were used to analyze data (P£0.05). The results showed 82% of subjects reported experiencing shoulder PAIN since wheelchair use and 70% reported current shoulder PAIN. However significant relationship between external and internal rotation STRENGTH, shoulder adduction and abduction STRENGTH with shoulder PAIN are observed (P£0.05). Also, results showed 63% ROTATOR CUFF IMPINGEMENT SYNDROME, 43% BICEPS TENDONITIS and 29% anterior instability in two groups. A significant relationship was reported between shoulder external and internal rotation, adduction and abduction STRENGTH with ROTATOR CUFF IMPINGEMENT SYNDROME (P£0.05).There is also significant relationship between shoulder external and internal rotation and abduction STRENGTH with BICEPS TENDONITIS. Also, significant difference was found between shoulder external and internal rotation, adduction, abduction and flexion STRENGTH in athletic compared tonorr-athletic (P£0.05).So, with respect to the high prevalence in shoulder PAIN in most wheelchair users, suggest to coaches to do STRENGTH program of shoulder and also takea physical rotation test for preventing any injuries and facilitating of rehabilitation process.

Cites

References

Cite

APA: Copy

RAHMANI, P., SHAHROKHI, H., & DANESHMANDI, H.. (2012). THE STUDY OF PREVALENCE AND CAUSES OF SHOULDER INJURIES IN RELATIONSHIP TO PAIN AND STRENGTH IN ELITE WHEELCHAIR BASKETBALL PLAYERS. OLYMPIC, 20(2 (SERIAL 58)), 73-84. SID. https://sid.ir/paper/37793/en

Vancouver: Copy

RAHMANI P., SHAHROKHI H., DANESHMANDI H.. THE STUDY OF PREVALENCE AND CAUSES OF SHOULDER INJURIES IN RELATIONSHIP TO PAIN AND STRENGTH IN ELITE WHEELCHAIR BASKETBALL PLAYERS. OLYMPIC[Internet]. 2012;20(2 (SERIAL 58)):73-84. Available from: https://sid.ir/paper/37793/en

IEEE: Copy

P. RAHMANI, H. SHAHROKHI, and H. DANESHMANDI, “THE STUDY OF PREVALENCE AND CAUSES OF SHOULDER INJURIES IN RELATIONSHIP TO PAIN AND STRENGTH IN ELITE WHEELCHAIR BASKETBALL PLAYERS,” OLYMPIC, vol. 20, no. 2 (SERIAL 58), pp. 73–84, 2012, [Online]. Available: https://sid.ir/paper/37793/en

Related Journal Papers

Related Seminar Papers

  • No record.
  • Related Plans

  • No record.
  • Recommended Workshops






    Move to top