Effects of upper arm articulations on shoulder-arm discomfort profile in a pronation task

Abstract

Twenty right-handed male university students performed a full factorial experiment, consisting of three forearm rotation angles (60% prone and supine, and neutral), two elbow angles (45°and 90°), three humeral rotation angles (45°, 90° and 135°), and two upper arm angles (45° flexion and neutral). The task was a one-second pronation torque of 20% Maximum Voluntary Contraction (MVC) relative to MVC at the standard position of the arm, 15 times per minute for 5 minutes, at each postural combination. Discomfort rating after the end of each five minute exertion was recorded on a visual analogue scale. A repeated measures ANCOVA on discomfort score indicated that endurance time was a significant covariate. Other significant factors were upper arm flexion angle, forearm rotation angle, and the interactions of upper arm*elbow and humeral rotation*forearm*endurance time. A supplementary experiment showed that in some of the deviated postures combinations the subjects required additional muscle force to achieve the 20% MVC from the original testing posture. Such data can be helpful for designing workplaces and developing biomechanical models, especially for assessment of designs in virtual environments

    Similar works

    Full text

    thumbnail-image