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Shoulder posterior tightness assessment
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Added by Shawn Maloney , last edited by Christian Veillette on May 31, 2008  (view change)
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Name of test

Test for Posterior Shoulder Tightness

What it tests

Assesses the tightness of the posterior shoulder structures

How to do it

Patient lies supine. Arm is abducted to 90 degrees. Scapula is then gripped and stabilized while the arm is brought into horizontal adduction. The measurement is taken with reference to the vertical, whereby a positive measurement is further adduction from the 90 degrees of flexion position.

The normal response

What it means if not normal

Comments

Intraclass correlation coefficients were high for intratester
(0.93, SEM 1.64 degrees) and intertester (0.91, SEM
1.71 degrees) measurements. This measurement was also shown to have a moderate to good relationship with lost internal shoulder
rotational motion (r = .72, P< .001) of the dominant arm
among the baseball pitchers.

Citations

Laudner KG, Stanek JM, Meister K, 2006 Oct-Dec. "Assessing posterior shoulder contracture: the reliability and validity of measuring glenohumeral joint horizontal adduction." J Athl Train 41 (4): 375-80 [PubMed]

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The following individuals have contributed to this page:
UserEditsCommentsLabelsLabel ListLast Update
Shawn Maloney 300173 days ago
Christian Veillette 100173 days ago

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