| Literature DB >> 30037348 |
Sarah Dupuis1,2, Carole Fortin2,3, Christiane Caouette1,2, Isabelle Leclair2,3, Carl-Éric Aubin4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Global postural re-education (GPR) is a physiotherapy treatment approach for pediatric idiopathic scoliosis (IS), where the physiotherapist qualitatively assesses scoliotic curvature reduction potential (with a manual correction) and patient's ability to self-correct (self-correction). To the author's knowledge, there are no studies regarding GPR applied to IS, hence there is a need to better understand the biomechanics of GPR curve reduction postures. The objective was to biomechanically and quantitatively evaluate those two re-education corrections using a computer model combined with experimental testing.Entities:
Keywords: Biomechanical modeling; Finite element model; Global postural re-education; Scoliosis
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30037348 PMCID: PMC6055339 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-018-2112-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Fig. 1Manual correction simulation and measurement methodology
Fig. 2Self-correction was simulated by moving the position of T1 and of the thoracic and lumbar apical vertebrae of the reference FEM to their self-correction position as measured in the self-correction reconstruction from radiographs
Manual correction’s thoracic Cobb angle simulation results compared to reference standing posture and associated stiffness indices
| Patient | Presenting deformity (standing posture) | Simulation of manual correction (% reduction) | Mean force applied by therapist over thoracic apex | Manual correction’s stiffness index |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| deg | deg (%) | N | N / deg | |
| P1 | 45 | 42 (7) | 31 | 10 |
| P2 | 25 | 21 (14) | 33 | 10 |
| P3 | 40 | 27 (31) | 31 | 3 |
| P4 | 33 | 25 (23) | 28 | 4 |
| P5 | 36 | 32 (13) | 28 | 6 |
| P6 | 23 | 16 (31) | 23 | 3 |
| P7 | 42 | 35 (17) | 25 | 4 |
| P8 | 36 | 27 (26) | 25 | 3 |
| P9 | 39 | 37 (7) | 26 | 10 |
| P10 | 28 | 10 (64) | 55 | 3 |
| P11 | 25 | 13 (48) | 29 | 2 |
| P12 | 37 | 31 (18) | 33 | 5 |
| P13 | 45 | 26 (43) | 42 | 2 |
| P14 | 11 | 5 (53) | 31 | 5 |
| P15 | 30 | 26 (13) | 34 | 9 |
| P16 | 31 | 27 (13) | 28 | 7 |
| Mean ± sd [min - max] | 33 ± 9 [11–45] | 25 ± 10 [5–42] | 31 ± 8 [23–55] | 5 ± 3 [2–10] |
Actual and simulated self-correction results of thoracic Cobb angle compared to reference standing posture and associated stiffness indices
| Patient | Presenting deformity (standing posture) | Actual self-correction (% correction) | Self-correction simulation (% correction) | Reaction force at thoracic apex | Self-correction’s stiffness index |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| deg | deg (%) | deg (%) | N | N/deg | |
| P1 | 45 | 30 (33) | 35 (22) | 68 | 7 |
| P2 | 25 | 19 (24) | 21 (17) | 27 | 6 |
| P3 | 40 | 25 (37) | 27 (33) | 29 | 2 |
| P4 | 33 | 23 (29) | 24 (27) | 22 | 2 |
| P5 | 36 | 23 (35) | 31 (15) | 64 | 12 |
| P6 | 23 | 16 (29) | 12 (47) | 8 | 1 |
| P7 | 42 | 39 (7) | 42 (2) | 16 | 21 |
| P8 | 36 | 17 (53) | 27 (27) | 52 | 5 |
| P9 | 39 | 26 (34) | 32 (19) | 77 | 10 |
| P10 | 28 | 22 (19) | 25 (11) | 24 | 8 |
| P11 | 25 | 28 (−15) | 28 (−13) | 1 | −0,40 |
| P12 | 37 | 27 (29) | 30 (19) | 39 | 5 |
| P13 | 45 | 29 (36) | 30 (33) | 79 | 5 |
| P14 | 11 | 4 (61) | 4 (66) | 27 | 4 |
| P15 | 30 | 9 (69) | 15 (50) | 100 | 7 |
| P16 | 31 | 15 (53) | 24 (25) | 80 | 10 |
| Mean ± sd [min - max] | 33 ± 9 [11–45] | 22 ± 9 [4–39] | 25 ± 9 [4–42] | 45 ± 30 [1–100] | 7 ± 5 [0–21] |
Fig. 3Low dose biplanar radiographs in standing posture and during self-correction illustrate patient’s potential to reduce the thoracic curvature immediately and momentarily. Self-correction numerical simulation agrees with self-correction radiographs