| Literature DB >> 26442253 |
Lisa Lighthall Haubert1, Sara J Mulroy1, Patricia E Hatchett1, Valerie J Eberly1, Somboon Maneekobkunwong2, Joanne K Gronley1, Philip S Requejo3.
Abstract
Car transfers and wheelchair (WC) loading are crucial for independent community participation in persons with complete paraplegia from spinal cord injury, but are complex, physically demanding, and known to provoke shoulder pain. This study aimed to describe techniques and factors influencing car transfer and WC loading for individuals with paraplegia driving their own vehicles and using their personal WCs. Sedans were the most common vehicle driven (59%). Just over half (52%) of drivers place their right leg only into the vehicle prior to transfer. Overall, the leading hand was most frequently placed on the driver's seat (66%) prior to transfer and the trailing hand was most often place on the WC seat (48%). Vehicle height influenced leading hand placement but not leg placement such that drivers of higher profile vehicles were more likely to place their hand on the driver's seat than those who drove sedans. Body lift time was negatively correlated with level of injury and age and positively correlated with vehicle height and shoulder abduction strength. Drivers who transferred with their leading hand on the steering wheel had significantly higher levels of shoulder pain than those who placed their hand on the driver's seat or overhead. The majority of participants used both hands (62%) to load their WC frame, and overall, most loaded their frame into the back (62%) vs. the front seat. Sedan drivers were more likely to load their frame into the front seat than drivers of higher profile vehicles (53 vs. 17%). Average time to load the WC frame (10.7 s) was 20% of the total WC loading time and was not related to shoulder strength, frame weight, or demographic characteristics. Those who loaded their WC frame into the back seat had significantly weaker right shoulder internal rotators. Understanding car transfers and WC loading in independent drivers is crucial to prevent shoulder pain and injury and preserve community participation.Entities:
Keywords: car transfer; depression transfers; independent drivers; paraplegia; shoulder pain; spinal cord injury; wheelchair
Year: 2015 PMID: 26442253 PMCID: PMC4585017 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2015.00139
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Pearson product-moment correlations between body lift time and demographic, car/WC dimensions, and isometric shoulder torques.
| Variable | Mean (SD) | Range (min–max) | Pearson correlation ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 40.2 (8.8) | 22.9–61.1 | −0.294 | 0.061 |
| Duration of SCI (years) | 14.9 (7.9) | 3.1–35.5 | −0.002 | 0.500 |
| Level of SCI (T2 = 2, T3 = 3, …, T12 = 12, L1 = 13, L2 = 14, L3 = 15) | 9.1 (3.5) | 2–15 (T2–L3) | − | |
| Body weight (kg) | 73.2 (17.1) | 44.0–120.3 | −0.203 | 0.145 |
| Car seat height (in) | 25.8 (5.3) | 19.0–38.3 | ||
| WC seat to car seat height difference (in) | 3.7 (5.5) | −3.5 to 16.0 | ||
| Horizontal distance between WC seat and car seat (in) | 11.8 (2.2) | 7.0–16.8 | 0.015 | 0.471 |
| Number of scoots prior to body lift | 1.32 (0.91) | 0–5 | −0.086 | 0.331 |
| Right adduction (Nm/kg × 100) | 98.4 (32.7) | 78.6–91.3 | 0.173 | 0.184 |
| Right internal rotation (Nm/kg × 100) | 46.3 (18.7) | 42.4–50.4 | 0.015 | 0.468 |
| Right external rotation (Nm/kg × 100) | 46.5 (14.4) | 39.2–45.6 | 0.298 | 0.058 |
| Right flexion (Nm/kg × 100) | 89.5 (28.4) | 71.1–81.4 | 0.240 | 0.105 |
| Right abduction (Nm/kg × 100) | 73.7 (25.3) | 59.9–69.6 | ||
| Right extension (Nm/kg × 100) | 94.6 (31.0) | 77.2–90.6 | 0.165 | 0.196 |
| Left adduction (Nm/kg × 100) | 99.9 (34.0) | 78.6–91.3 | 0.134 | 0.244 |
| Left internal rotation (Nm/kg × 100) | 50.9 (16.8) | 42.4–50.4 | 0.083 | 0.334 |
| Left external rotation (Nm/kg × 100) | 48.1 (14.6) | 39.2–45.6 | 0.257 | 0.089 |
| Left flexion (Nm/kg × 100) | 90.7 (26.1) | 71.1–81.4 | 0.162 | 0.201 |
| Left abduction (Nm/kg × 100) | 75.8 (24.1) | 59.9–69.6 | ||
| Left extension (Nm/kg × 100) | 89.5 (27.1) | 77.2–90.6 | 0.100 | 0.302 |
Bold results indicate .
Figure 1(A) Car transfer into a mid-height vehicle with right leg inside and left leg outside of the vehicle and leading hand on the driver’s seat. (B) Car transfer into a sedan with both legs in the vehicle and the leading hand on the grab bar. (C) Car transfer into a sedan with both legs outside of the vehicle and the leading hand on the steering wheel.
Figure 2Scatterplot with trend-line illustrating relationship between level of SCI (T2–L3) and body lift time (sec . T2 = 2, T3 = 3, T4 = 4, …, T12 = 12, Ll = 13, L2 = 14, L3 = 15.
Figure 3Scatterplot with trend-line illustrating relationship between car seat height (in .