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Effects of Exercise Program Intervention on Muscle Activity in Rotator Cuff Repair Patient  

Kang, Jeong-Il (Department of Physical Therapy, Sehan University)
Moon, Young-Jun (Department of Physical Therapy, Graduate School, Sehan University)
Park, Seung-Kyu (Department of Physical Therapy, Sehan University)
Lee, Joon-Hee (Department of Physical Therapy, Sehan University)
Yang, Dae-Jung (Department of Physical Therapy, Sehan University)
Choi, Hyun (Department of Physical Therapy, Graduate School, Sehan University)
Jeong, Dae-Keun (Department of Physical Therapy, Graduate School, Sehan University)
Kim, Yong-Nam (Department of Physical Therapy, Nambu University)
Kwon, Hye-Min (Department of Physical Therapy, Seonam University)
Publication Information
The Journal of Korean Physical Therapy / v.25, no.2, 2013 , pp. 56-63 More about this Journal
Abstract
Purpose: This study was conducted in order to examine how an effective rehabilitation exercise program influences the activity of shoulder muscles, and to help the clinical application of a rehabilitation program, for prevention and relief of pain, adhesion, and joint stiffness of patients who undergo rotator cuff repair. Methods: Nine test subjects were placed randomly into each group for a total of 27 subjects and exercise program interventions according to the group were conducted for six weeks, after which maximum voluntary isometric contraction (%MVIC) value was re-measured for supraspinatus muscle, infraspinatus muscle, serratus anterior muscle, and middle deltoid muscle in all groups in order to compare changes in muscle activity before and after the experiment in order to perform comparative analysis of changes in muscle activity between groups, based on which four experimental hypotheses were confirmed. Results: Changes in muscle activity according to %MVIC showed a statistically significant difference (p<0.01) (p<0.001) in all muscles, except the middle deltoid muscle, and post-verification results showed that changes in muscle activity according to %MVIC were greater in test groups I and II, compared with the control group, for the supraspinatus muscle, infraspinatus muscle, and serratus anterior muscle. Conclusion: Therefore, rehabilitation through use of the methods described above should be applied efficiently in clinical settings and more research in development of much more efficient rehabilitation program interventions must be conducted.
Keywords
Rotator cuff; Supraspinatus; Infraspinatus;
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