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Neuromuscular control of scapula muscles during a voluntary task in subjects with Subacromial Impingement Syndrome. A case-control study
Authors:C.M. Larsen  K. Søgaard  S.S. Chreiteh  A. Holtermann  B. Juul-Kristensen
Affiliation:1. University of Southern Denmark, Institute of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics, Research Unit for Physical Activity and Health at Work., Odense M, Denmark;2. National Research Centre for the Working Environment, Copenhagen Ø, Denmark
Abstract:Imbalance of neuromuscular activity in the scapula stabilizers in subjects with Subacromial Impingement Syndrome (SIS) is described in restricted tasks and specific populations. Our aim was to compare the scapular muscle activity during a voluntary movement task in a general population with and without SIS (n = 16, No-SIS = 15).Surface electromyography was measured from Serratus anterior (SA) and Trapezius during bilateral arm elevation (no-load, 1 kg, 3 kg). Mean relative muscle activity was calculated for SA and the upper (UT) and lower part of trapezius (LWT), in addition to activation ratio and time to activity onset. In spite of a tendency to higher activity among SIS 0.10–0.30 between-group differences were not significant neither in ratio of muscle activation 0.80–0.98 nor time to activity onset 0.53–0.98.The hypothesized between-group differences in neuromuscular activity of Trapezius and Serratus was not confirmed. The tendency to a higher relative muscle activity in SIS could be due to a pain-related increase in co-activation or a decrease in maximal activation. The negative findings may display the variation in the specific muscle activation patterns depending on the criteria used to define the population of impingement patients, as well as the methodological procedure being used, and the shoulder movement investigated.
Keywords:Muscle imbalance  Muscle latency  Shoulder pathology  Scapular stability
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