| Literature DB >> 22163507 |
Letícia Carnaz1, Mariana V Batistao, Helenice J C Gil Coury.
Abstract
No guidelines are available to orient researchers on the availability and applications of equipment and sensors for recording precise neck movements in occupational settings. In this study reports on direct measurements of neck movements in the workplace were reviewed. Using relevant keywords two independent reviewers searched for eligible studies in the following databases: Cinahal, Cochrane, Embase, Lilacs, PubMed, MEDLINE, PEDro, Scopus and Web of Science. After applying the inclusion criteria, 13 articles on direct neck measurements in occupational settings were retrieved from among 33,666 initial titles. These studies were then methodologically evaluated according to their design characteristics, exposure and outcome assessment, and statistical analysis. The results showed that in most of the studies the three axes of neck movement (flexion-extension, lateral flexion and rotation) were not simultaneously recorded. Deficiencies in available equipment explain this flaw, demonstrating that sensors and systems need to be improved so that a true understanding of real occupational exposure can be achieved. Further studies are also needed to assess neck movement in those who perform heavy-duty work, such as nurses and electricians, since no report about such jobs was identified.Entities:
Keywords: cervical movement; direct measurements; occupational exposure; portable equipment
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 22163507 PMCID: PMC3231066 DOI: 10.3390/s101210967
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Description of the different items in the quality assessment lists proposed by Ariens et al. [6]. The highlighted items were applied in this review for evaluating the methodological quality of the studies included.
| A. Positive if a specific, clearly stated purpose was described | Cr | Ca | Pr | I |
| B. Positive if the main features (description of sampling frame, distribution by age and gender) of the study population were stated. | Cr | Ca | Pr | I |
| C. Positive if the participation rate at the beginning of the study was at least 80% | Cr | Ca | Pr | V/P |
| D. Positive if the cases and referents were drawn from the same population and a clear definition of the cases and referents was stated. Persons with neck pain in the last 90 days had to be excluded from the reference group | Ca | V/P | ||
| E. Positive if the response after 1 year of follow-up was at least 80% or if the nonresponse was not selective | Pr | V/P | ||
| F. Positive if the data on physical load at work were collected and used in the analysis | Cr | Ca | Pr | V/P |
| G. Positive if the data on physical load at work were collected and used using standardized methods of acceptable quality | Cr | Ca | Pr | V/P |
| H. Positive if the data on psychosocial factors at work were collected and used in the analysis | Cr | Ca | Pr | V/P |
| I. Positive if the data on psychosocial factors at work were collected and used using standardized methods of acceptable quality | Cr | Ca | Pr | V/P |
| J. Positive if the data on physical and psychosocial factors during leisure time were collected and used in the analysis | Cr | Ca | Pr | V/P |
| K. Positive if the data on historical exposure at work were collected and used in the analysis | Cr | Ca | Pr | V/P |
| L. Positive if the data on history of neck disorders, gender, and age were collected and used in the analysis | Cr | Ca | Pr | |
| M. Positive if the exposure assessment was blinded with respect to disease status | Cr | Ca | ||
| N. Positive if exposure was measured in an identical way among the cases and referents | Ca | |||
| O. Positive if the exposure was assessed at a time prior to the occurrence of the outcome | Ca | |||
| P. Positive if data on outcome were collected using standardized methods of acceptable quality | Cr | Ca | Pr | V/P |
| Q. Positive if incident cases were used (prospective enrollment) | Ca | V/P | ||
| R. Positive if the data on outcome were collected for at least 1 year | Pr | V/P | ||
| S. Positive if the data on outcome were collected at least every 3 months | Pr | V/P | ||
| T. Positive if the statistical model used was appropriate for the outcome studied and the measures of association estimated with this model were presented (including confidence intervals) | Cr | Ca | Pr | V/P |
| U. Positive if the study controlled for confounding factors | Cr | Ca | Pr | V/P |
| V. Positive if the number of cases in the multivariate analysis was at least 10 times the number of independent variables in the analysis | Cr | Ca | Pr | V/P |
This column shows whether the item was used in the quality list for cross-sectional (Cr), case-referent (Ca) or prospective cohort (Pr) studies.
This column shows whether the stated item was an information (I) or a validity/precision item.
This item was scored positive if one of the following criteria was met: (i) for direct measurements, intraclass correlation coefficient >0.60 or kappa >0.40; (ii) for observational methods, intraclass correlation coefficient >0.60 or kappa >0.40; for the inter- or inter-aobserver reliability.
This item was scored positive if one of the following criteria was met: (i) for self-reported data, intraclass correlation coefficient >0.60 or kappa >0.40; (ii) for registered data, data must show that the registration system was valid and reliable; and (iii) for physical examination, intraclass correlation coefficient >0.60 or kappa 0.40 for the intraobserver reliability.
Figure 1.Steps followed for selection of the 13 complete articles included in the study.
Used equipment, duration of the recording, objective of the measurements, occupational activities and relevant findings.
| Aarås | Pendulum Potenciometer (Physiometer) | Flexion/extension | To analyze position of the upper arm and head as an indicator of load on the shoulder. | Industrial workers | Head flexion was negatively correlated with arm flexion and with load on the upper trapezius muscle. | |
| Aarås | Pendulum Potenciometer (Physiometer) | Flexion/extension | To study the relationship between postural load for a group of workers and the development of musculoskeletal illness related to length of employment. | Industrial workers | Postural load influenced the musculoskeletal sick leave. | |
| Åkesson | Inclinometers (Logger Teknologi) | Flexion/extension and lateral flexion | To describe potential neck and upper limb risk factors in female dentists-comparison between symptomatic and asymptomatic workers. | Dentists | There were not relevant differences between disorders and non-disorders dentists for flexion/extension movements, but higher differences were identified when the lateral flexion movements were analyzed. | |
| Arvidsson | Inclinometers (Logger Teknologi) | Flexion/extension | To evaluate the physical workload in a group of women and men. | Air traffic controllers | The postural workload showed only minor differences between genders. | |
| Arvidsson | Inclinometers (Logger Teknologi) | Flexion/extension | To evaluate physical exposure, in terms of posture, movements and muscular load among air traffic controllers performing the same work task in two systems. | Air traffic controllers | There were large differences in the musculoskeletal loads between old and new systems. During the breaks, the neck ranges were higher than during work. | |
| Arvidsson | Inclinometers (Logger Teknologi) | Flexion/extension and lateral flexion | To find out whether females with clinically defined neck-shoulder disorders performed this work differently than healthy referents. | Air traffic controllers | There was no significant difference in neck posture between cases and referents. | |
| Balogh | Inclinometers (Logger Teknologi) | Flexion/extension | To quantify change in physical workload as a consequence of the stepwise technical development of three generations of production system designs. | Operators processing wooden boards for parquet flooring | There were evident differences between all three system designs. The automated line showed larger range of motion for the head while the semi-automated line showed the lowest one. | |
| Byström | Inclinometers (Logger Teknologi) | Flexion/extension | To determine the physical workload on neck and upper limb in computer aided design (CAD) work, and to evaluate the impact of two different CAD applications, two different input devices and sitting and standing work positions. | VDU workers | ||
| Eklund | Electric Potenciometers (Nickometer,Goteborg) | Flexion/extension, lateral flexion and rotation | To identify important causes of postural load for work vehicle drivers, especially head posture. | Work vehicle drivers | ||
| Hansson | Inclinometers (Logger Teknologi) | Flexion/extension | To evaluate the agreement between questionnaire-assessed and technically measured mechanical exposure to different posture and movements. | Office workers | Regarding the postures, there was almost no agreement between questionnaire-assessed and technically measured mechanical exposure within the occupational groups. | |
| Jonker | Inclinometers (Logger Teknologi) | Flexion/extension and lateral flexion | To examine associations between work postures/movements and self-reported workload. | Dentists | No significant correlation was found between perception of variables in physical demands at work, perception of workload and the neck angles. | |
| Flexion/extension | Lateral flexion | |||||
| 10th: −12.5(−16;−9) | 10th: −9.5(−11.8;−7.1) | |||||
| 90th: 27.4(24.2;30.5) | 90th: 15.4(12.4;18.4) | |||||
| Juul-Kristensen | Inclinometers (Logger Teknologi) | Flexion/extension and lateral flexion | To compare postures and movements in repetitive poultry processing plant work using a video-based observation method and direct technical measurements. | Workers in poultry processing | The difference between the observational method and direct technical measurements was 27% for neck flexion. After adjustments for the different reference positions used, differences in neck flexion decreased to 13%. | |
| Nordander | Inclinometers (Logger Teknologi) | Flexion/extension | To evaluate whether male and female workers performing identical work tasks differ in risk of disorders or in physical or psychosocial exposure. | Repetitive industrial tasks | No major gender differences could be found concerning working postures of the head. | |
Total = total number of workers;
included = number of workers included in the study;
measured = number of workers evaluated by direct measurements
Methodological evaluation of the studies included in this review. As mentioned in Method, data on physical load using standardized methods (direct recording) at work was applied as an inclusion criterion for the present study, and not considered for the total score sum.
| [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | [ | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participation rate at baseline at least 80% or not selective | ND | ND | ND | − | ND | − | − | − | ND | − | − | ND | − |
| Data on physical load at work collected and used in the analysis | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + |
| Data on physical load collected using standardized methods of acceptable quality | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + |
| Data on outcome collected with standardized methods of acceptable quality | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + |
| Statistical model appropriate for the outcome studied and a measure of association (including confidence intervals) presented | − | − | − | − | − | − | + | − | ND | − | + | − | + |
| Number of cases in the multivariate analysis at least 10 times the number of independent variables | − | − | + | + | − | + | + | − | + | + | + | + | + |
| 2/5 | 2/5 | 3/5 | 3/5 | 2/5 | 3/5 | 4/5 | 2/5 | 3/5 | 3/5 | 4/5 | 3/5 | 4/5 |