Three-dimensional kinematics of shoulder laxity examination and the relationship to clinical interpretation

Understanding clinical test kinematics improves utility of exam techniques. The purposes of this study were as follows: (1) determine inter-examiner repeatability of translation magnitude for the Anterior/Posterior Drawer and Sulcus shoulder laxity tests; (2) describe the relationships between gleno...

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Main Authors: Justin L. Staker, Amy E. Lelwica, Paula M. Ludewig, Jonathan P. Braman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-11-01
Series:International Biomechanics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23335432.2017.1372217
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spelling doaj-9277b9eb180144f99a1d3ac9920a6e1e2020-11-25T02:22:16ZengTaylor & Francis GroupInternational Biomechanics2333-54322017-11-0142778510.1080/23335432.2017.13722171372217Three-dimensional kinematics of shoulder laxity examination and the relationship to clinical interpretationJustin L. Staker0Amy E. Lelwica1Paula M. Ludewig2Jonathan P. Braman3Medical School, The University of Minnesota Medical SchoolUniversity of MinnesotaMedical School, The University of Minnesota Medical SchoolUniversity of MinnesotaUnderstanding clinical test kinematics improves utility of exam techniques. The purposes of this study were as follows: (1) determine inter-examiner repeatability of translation magnitude for the Anterior/Posterior Drawer and Sulcus shoulder laxity tests; (2) describe the relationships between glenohumeral joint translations and subjective grades for each laxity test; and (3) describe the relationship of overall glenohumeral joint laxity to a composite subjective score from the three laxity tests. Eleven subjects with shoulder symptomology were examined with three laxity tests. Motion was tracked with electromagnetic sensors affixed to the humerus and scapula via transcortical pins. ICCs were calculated to determine repeatability of translation magnitudes between two examiners for each test. Descriptive statistics and regression analyses were performed for comparisons of single laxity test grades with translation magnitudes and for composite subjective laxity scores and overall translation across all three tests. Inter-examiner ICCs regarding kinematic repeatability were 0.87 for Anterior Drawer, 0.84 for the Sulcus test, and not calculable for the Posterior Drawer. No linear relationships between subjective grades of individual tests and translation magnitudes were found. The relationship of overall translation with the composite subjective score from all laxity tests was r2 = 0.75 (r = 0.86). Clinicians from different disciplines are capable of imparting similar translations during laxity tests. Single-test subjective laxity grades demonstrate large ranges of translation between subjects for the same grade. By combining results of three laxity tests, clinicians are capable of identifying the level of overall shoulder joint laxity in patients.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23335432.2017.1372217Shoulder biomechanicslaxity testreliabilityvalidityexamination
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Justin L. Staker
Amy E. Lelwica
Paula M. Ludewig
Jonathan P. Braman
spellingShingle Justin L. Staker
Amy E. Lelwica
Paula M. Ludewig
Jonathan P. Braman
Three-dimensional kinematics of shoulder laxity examination and the relationship to clinical interpretation
International Biomechanics
Shoulder biomechanics
laxity test
reliability
validity
examination
author_facet Justin L. Staker
Amy E. Lelwica
Paula M. Ludewig
Jonathan P. Braman
author_sort Justin L. Staker
title Three-dimensional kinematics of shoulder laxity examination and the relationship to clinical interpretation
title_short Three-dimensional kinematics of shoulder laxity examination and the relationship to clinical interpretation
title_full Three-dimensional kinematics of shoulder laxity examination and the relationship to clinical interpretation
title_fullStr Three-dimensional kinematics of shoulder laxity examination and the relationship to clinical interpretation
title_full_unstemmed Three-dimensional kinematics of shoulder laxity examination and the relationship to clinical interpretation
title_sort three-dimensional kinematics of shoulder laxity examination and the relationship to clinical interpretation
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series International Biomechanics
issn 2333-5432
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Understanding clinical test kinematics improves utility of exam techniques. The purposes of this study were as follows: (1) determine inter-examiner repeatability of translation magnitude for the Anterior/Posterior Drawer and Sulcus shoulder laxity tests; (2) describe the relationships between glenohumeral joint translations and subjective grades for each laxity test; and (3) describe the relationship of overall glenohumeral joint laxity to a composite subjective score from the three laxity tests. Eleven subjects with shoulder symptomology were examined with three laxity tests. Motion was tracked with electromagnetic sensors affixed to the humerus and scapula via transcortical pins. ICCs were calculated to determine repeatability of translation magnitudes between two examiners for each test. Descriptive statistics and regression analyses were performed for comparisons of single laxity test grades with translation magnitudes and for composite subjective laxity scores and overall translation across all three tests. Inter-examiner ICCs regarding kinematic repeatability were 0.87 for Anterior Drawer, 0.84 for the Sulcus test, and not calculable for the Posterior Drawer. No linear relationships between subjective grades of individual tests and translation magnitudes were found. The relationship of overall translation with the composite subjective score from all laxity tests was r2 = 0.75 (r = 0.86). Clinicians from different disciplines are capable of imparting similar translations during laxity tests. Single-test subjective laxity grades demonstrate large ranges of translation between subjects for the same grade. By combining results of three laxity tests, clinicians are capable of identifying the level of overall shoulder joint laxity in patients.
topic Shoulder biomechanics
laxity test
reliability
validity
examination
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23335432.2017.1372217
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