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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Hidalgo, Benjamin*; | Gobert, François | Bragard, Dominique | Detrembleur, Christine
Affiliations: Institute of Neuroscience, Faculty of Motor Sciences, University of Louvain, Brussels, Belgium
Correspondence: [*] Address for correspondence: Benjamin Hidalgo, Université Catholique de Louvain, Institute of Neuroscience, Avenue Mounier, 53-B1.53.04, 1200 Brussels, Belgium. Tel.: +32 2 764 53 75; Fax: +32 2 764 53 60; E-mail: [email protected]
Abstract: Background:Various inputs of proprioception have been identified and shown to influence low back proprioception sense. Objective:To investigate the effect of disrupting proprioception on lumbar spine repositioning error during forward bending. Method:Healthy-subjects (n=28) and patients with non-specific chronic low-back pain (n=10) aged between 20–50 years. Subjects performed 5 repetitions of a lumbar repositioning task targeting 30° of trunk-forward-bending from a seated-position with different proprioceptive disturbances administered to the low back. Video analysis of skin reflective markers measured lumbar spine range-of-motion. A control-task was performed without any proprioceptive disturbance, while the remaining 4 tasks were electro-stimulation, vibration, taping and sitting on an unstable surface. Results:The healthy group showed significantly altered repositioning error when compared with the control task (p=0.004): control-task vs. taping-task, vibration-task and unstable-sitting. In the NS-CLBP group, one motor-task showed significant difference in control-task vs. taping-task (p=0.004). Comparison between the NS-CLBP and matched-healthy groups revealed that the NS-CLBP subjects had larger repositioning-error (p=0.009) for control, taping and vibration tasks. Conclusions:Proprioceptive disturbances had the most significant effect in increasing repositioning-error among healthy subjects. The between-groups analysis confirmed evidence consistent with the literature of greater repositioning-error in people with NS-CLBP than healthy subjects.
Keywords: Kinematics, low back pain, proprioception, repositioning error, spine
DOI: 10.3233/BMR-130396
Journal: Journal of Back and Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation, vol. 26, no. 4, pp. 381-387, 2013
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