Objectives. The objective of this study was to assess the association between whole body sagittal balance and risk of falls in elderly patients who have sought treatment for back pain. Balanced spinal sagittal alignment is known to be important for the
Objectives. To evaluate the neck strength of school-aged rugby players, and
to define the relationship with proxy physical measures with a view
to predicting neck strength. Methods. Cross-sectional cohort study involving 382 rugby playing schoolchildren
at three Scottish schools (all male, aged between 12 and 18 years).
Outcome measures included maximal isometric neck extension, weight,
height, grip strength, cervical range of movement and neck circumference. Results. Mean neck extension strength increased with age (p = 0.001),
although a wide inter-age range variation was evident, with the
result that some of the oldest children presented with the same
neck strength as the mean of the youngest group. Grip strength explained
the most variation in neck strength (R. 2. = 0.53), while
cervical range of movement and neck girth demonstrated no relationship.
Multivariable analysis demonstrated the independent effects of age,
weight and grip strength, and the resultant model explained 62.1%
of the variance in neck strength. This model predicted actual neck
strength well for the majority of players, although there was a
tendency towards overestimation at the lowest range and underestimation
at the highest. Conclusion. A wide variation was evident in neck strength across the range
of the schoolchild-playing population, with a surprisingly large
number of senior players demonstrating the same mean strength as
the 12-year-old mean value. This may suggest that current training
regimes address limb strength but not neck strength, which may be
significant for future neck injury
Loss of motion following spine segment fusion results in increased strain in the adjacent motion segments. However, to date, studies on the biomechanics of the cervical spine have not assessed the role of coupled motions in the lumbar spine. Accordingly, we investigated the biomechanics of the cervical spine following cervical fusion and lumbar fusion during simulated whiplash using a whole-human finite element (FE) model to simulate coupled motions of the spine. A previously validated FE model of the human body in the driver-occupant position was used to investigate cervical hyperextension injury. The cervical spine was subjected to simulated whiplash exposure in accordance with Euro NCAP (the European New Car Assessment Programme) testing using the whole human FE model. The coupled motions between the cervical spine and lumbar spine were assessed by evaluating the biomechanical effects of simulated cervical fusion and lumbar fusion.Objectives
Methods