Effect of a Neoprene Sleeve on Knee Joint Position Sense During Sitting Open Kinetic Chain and Supine Closed Kinetic Chain Tests

Author:

Birmingham Trevor B.1,Kramer John F.1,Inglis J. Tim2,Mooney Colleen A.1,Murray Lisa J.1,Fowler Peter J.1,Kirkley Sandy1

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Health Sciences, The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario

2. School of Human Kinetics, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Abstract

The primary objective of the present study was to compare the effect of a neoprene sleeve on knee joint position sense during a sitting open kinetic chain test and a supine closed kinetic chain test. Young (24 2 years old), healthy subjects (18 men and 18 women) performed knee joint angle replication tests during open kinetic chain knee extension (sitting) and closed kinetic chain leg press (supine with an axial load of 15% body weight) before and after application of a neoprene sleeve over the dominant knee. The improvement in ability to replicate joint angles after application of the sleeve (sleeve effect) was significantly less during the supine closed kinetic chain test (0.3° 1.4°) than during the sitting open kinetic chain test (1.2° 1.1°). The sleeve effect was inversely related to subjects' performance without the sleeve during both the sitting open kinetic chain and supine closed kinetic chain tests, suggesting that some people may derive greater benefit from the sleeve than others. Although the sleeve effects were small, particularly during the supine closed kinetic chain test, 72% of subjects felt that the sleeve improved their overall test performance. Future research is needed to establish the functional relevance of the small sleeve effects observed and to identify the characteristics of people who might derive greatest benefit from sleeve use.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

Reference23 articles.

1. Proprioceptive coordination of movement sequences: role of velocity and position information

2. Gandevia SC: Kinesthesia: Roles for afferent signals and motor commands, in Rowell LB, Shepard JT (eds): Handbook on Integration of Motor, Circulatory, Respiratory and Metabolic Control During Exercise. Bethesda, MD, American Physiological Society, 1996, pp 128-172

3. Peripheral Neural Mechanisms in Proprioception

4. The importance of somatosensory information in triggering and scaling automatic postural responses in humans

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