Manual Therapy
Volume 10, Issue 1 , Pages 44-51, February 2005

Influence of cranio-cervical posture on three-dimensional motion of the cervical spine

  • Stephen J. Edmondston

      Affiliations

    • School of Physiotherapy, Curtin University of Technology, P.O. Box U1987, Perth, WA, Australia
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.:+61-8-9266-3665; fax: +61-8-9266-3699
  • ,
  • Svein-Erik Henne

      Affiliations

    • Master of Manipulative Therapy Program, Curtin University of Technology, Australia
  • ,
  • Winston Loh

      Affiliations

    • Master of Manipulative Therapy Program, Curtin University of Technology, Australia
  • ,
  • Eirik Østvold

      Affiliations

    • Master of Manipulative Therapy Program, Curtin University of Technology, Australia

Received 10 December 2003; received in revised form 17 May 2004; accepted 8 July 2004.

Abstract 

Although a consistent pattern of ipsilateral movement coupling between cervical spine rotation and lateral flexion has been widely described, variability in these movement patterns has not been reported. In 30 asymptomatic subjects, the ranges of primary and coupled movements were determined in the neutral posture, and in the extremes of cervical spine protraction and retraction. All measurements were performed using the SpinT three-dimensional goniometer for which excellent intra-tester reliability was demonstrated for both primary (ICC3,1 0.93–0.98) and coupled (ICC3,1 0.76–0.98) movements. The ranges of primary and coupled movements changed significantly when movement was initiated from the end-range postures (). In the neutral posture, approximately 70% of subjects demonstrated an ipsilateral pattern of coupled movement. During cervical rotation, the dominant coupling pattern seen in neutral was no longer retained in retraction, while the protracted posture had a greater influence on the coupled movements accompanying primary lateral flexion. The concept of a stereotypical pattern of cervical spine movement coupling is not supported by these results. The posture in which movements are initiated appears to have a significant influence on the three-dimensional kinematics of the cervical spine.

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PII: S1356-689X(04)00070-0

doi:10.1016/j.math.2004.07.004

Manual Therapy
Volume 10, Issue 1 , Pages 44-51, February 2005