Kenji Endo1, Kiminori Yukata, Natsuo Yasui. 1. Department of Orthopedics, School of Medicine, The University of Tokushima, 3-18-15 Kuramoto, Tokushima 770-8503, Japan. endoken@clin.med.tokushima-u.ac.jp
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Scapular activity during shoulder motion is critical for normal shoulder function. With aging, muscle function deteriorates in almost all people, which may lead to shoulder impingement syndrome. METHODS: Forty-four normal subjects, 23 men and 21 women aged from 16 to 73 years with a mean age 48, were enrolled in the study. Static antero-posterior radiography at both 0 degrees and 90 degrees of abduction were undertaken and correlation between age and scapular orientations were evaluated by Pearson's correlation coefficient test. The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationship between aging and scapulo-thoracic orientation. FINDINGS: Significant correlation coefficients were observed between aging and scapular orientations. With the shoulder at 0 degrees abduction, posterior tilt showed significant negative correlation with aging. At 90 degrees abduction, both posterior tilt and upward rotation angle correlated negatively with aging. The correlation was apparent at 90 degrees abduction. INTERPRETATION: The results indicate that shoulder aging closely relates to changes of scapular orientation, which consist of decreases of the posterior tilt at 0 degrees and 90 degrees abduction and the upward rotation angle at 90 degrees. The current study indicated that one of the effects of aging on the shoulder is a decrease of posterior tilt and upward rotation angle as seen in an abducted position; and that these alterations are similar to the scapular kinematics of shoulder impingement syndrome. By taking this concept into consideration, the effects of aging on shoulder kinematics can be appropriately evaluated.
BACKGROUND: Scapular activity during shoulder motion is critical for normal shoulder function. With aging, muscle function deteriorates in almost all people, which may lead to shoulder impingement syndrome. METHODS: Forty-four normal subjects, 23 men and 21 women aged from 16 to 73 years with a mean age 48, were enrolled in the study. Static antero-posterior radiography at both 0 degrees and 90 degrees of abduction were undertaken and correlation between age and scapular orientations were evaluated by Pearson's correlation coefficient test. The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationship between aging and scapulo-thoracic orientation. FINDINGS: Significant correlation coefficients were observed between aging and scapular orientations. With the shoulder at 0 degrees abduction, posterior tilt showed significant negative correlation with aging. At 90 degrees abduction, both posterior tilt and upward rotation angle correlated negatively with aging. The correlation was apparent at 90 degrees abduction. INTERPRETATION: The results indicate that shoulder aging closely relates to changes of scapular orientation, which consist of decreases of the posterior tilt at 0 degrees and 90 degrees abduction and the upward rotation angle at 90 degrees. The current study indicated that one of the effects of aging on the shoulder is a decrease of posterior tilt and upward rotation angle as seen in an abducted position; and that these alterations are similar to the scapular kinematics of shoulder impingement syndrome. By taking this concept into consideration, the effects of aging on shoulder kinematics can be appropriately evaluated.
Authors: Rakesh Krishnan; Niclas Björsell; Elena M Gutierrez-Farewik; Christian Smith Journal: Med Biol Eng Comput Date: 2018-10-26 Impact factor: 2.602