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The effect of co-stabilizer muscle activation on knee joint position sense: A single group pre-post testopen access

Authors
Nam, Y.Lee, H.J.Choi, M.Chung, S.Park, J.Yu, J.
Issue Date
Jul-2016
Publisher
Society of Physical Therapy Science (Rigaku Ryoho Kagakugakkai)
Keywords
Co-stabilizer muscle; Knee joint position sense; Sitting position
Citation
Journal of Physical Therapy Science, v.28, no.7, pp 2119 - 2122
Pages
4
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Journal of Physical Therapy Science
Volume
28
Number
7
Start Page
2119
End Page
2122
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/25148
DOI
10.1589/jpts.28.2119
ISSN
0915-5287
2187-5626
Abstract
[Purpose] The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of co-stabilizer muscle activation on knee joint position sense. [Subjects and Methods] This study was a pre-post, single-blinded randomly controlled trial (angle sequence randomly selected) design. Seven healthy adults with no orthopaedic or neurological problems participated in this study. Knee joint position sense was measured by a target matching test at target angles of 30°, 45° and 80° of knee flexion a using digital inclinometer under two conditions: erect sitting, which is known to highly activate co-stabilizer muscle and slump sitting, which is known to little activate the co-stabilizer muscle. [Results] A significant difference in joint position matching error at the knee flexion angle of 45° was founded between two conditions erect sitting: (3.83 ± 1.47) and slump sitting: (1.00 ± 0.63). There were no significant differences in joint position matching error at the other target angles. [Conclusion] Knee joint position sense at 45° is likely to be affected by activation of co-stabilizer muscle, and this value is suitable for facilitation of joint position sense with skilled movement. © 2016 The Society of Physical Therapy Science.
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