Anatomy-Physiotherapy-logo

  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Français (France)
  • Portuguese (PT)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • Spanish (ES)
  • English (UK)

           

  • Articles
    Evidence based articles
    • Musculoskeletal
      • Upper extremity
      • Lower extremity
      • Spine
    • Other
      • Nervous
      • Circulatory
      • Nutrition
      • Aging
      • Pain
      • Various
  • Art & Design
    Anatomy related art
  • Videos
    Webinars & more
  • Create account
    Personal pages & favourites
  • Login
    Login to A&P
Anatomy-Physiotherapy-logo
12 Mar2018

12 March 2018.

Written by Jonathan Ko
Posted in Musculoskeletal

12-03-2018 08:11:48
swimswam
Image by: swimswam

Shoulder strength values and ratio for swimmers without pain

Shoulder pain is common among swimmers and subsequently has attracted various types of studies on the topic.

More well-known proposed mechanisms for shoulder pain in swimmers include factors like: shoulder muscle weakness, strength imbalance between the external rotation (ER) and internal rotation (IR), training load and past history of shoulder injury.

Rather than observing subjects with pain, this study examined subjects without pain (in the past 2 months) to establish normative data.

In this study, 85 young swimmers were tested for shoulder flexion (FL), extension (EX), external rotation (ER) and internal rotation (IR) strength in the supine position measured against a handheld dynamometer. 

Amongst a vast array of data, the summary of strength ratios is as follows:

Comparison Dominant vs. Non-dominant side
Females:
FL:EX ratio: Dominant: 0.93  Non-dominant: 0.93
IR:ER ratio: Dominant: 1.09  Non-dominant: 1.09
Males:
FL:EX ratio: Dominant: 0.86  Non-dominant: 0.87
IR:ER ratio: Dominant: 1.15 Non-dominant: 1.15

Comparison swimmers with vs. without a history of shoulder pain (Note: subjects with who had pain within 2-months prior to the study were not eligible)
FL:EX ratio: History of pain 0.97 No history of pain 0.95
IR:ER ratio: History of pain 1.15 No history of pain 1.14

The data established by this study could be used for assessment and treatment of swimmers. It must be noted that this study alone does not establish the relationship between shoulder strength and pain in swimmers.

> From: McLaine et al., J Sci Med Sport 21 (2018-03-12 08:11:43) 35-39. All rights reserved to Elsevier Ltd.. Click here for the online summary.

sciencedirect
Image by: sciencedirect

Please log in or create an account to place comments. It's free and takes only a minute.

About the Author
Jonathan Ko
Jonathan Ko
CLINICAL DIRECTORAPA SPORTS & MUSCULOSKELETAL PHYSIOTHERAPIST Jonathan is an APA titled sports and musculoskeletal physiotherapist. The title ser...

Latest articles from this auhtor

  • Manual therapy for LBP with associated disc degeneration
  • Subacromial Shoulder Pain - those who have and don't have it
  • What do patients seek in primary care physiotherapy?
  • What patients think about the cause of their CLBP
  • Safe lifting: what do health professionals believe?
 

 

Login

  • Forgot your password?
  • Forgot your username?
  • Create an account
AP banner Sono 1

Related

Sub Menu

  • Musculoskeletal
    • Upper extremity
      • Shoulder
      • Elbow
      • Wrist
      • Hand
    • Lower extremity
      • Hip
      • Knee
      • Ankle
      • Foot
    • Spine
      • Pelvis
      • Lumbar
      • Thoracic
      • Rib cage
      • Cervical
  • Other
    • Nervous
    • Circulatory
    • Nutrition
    • Aging
    • Pain
    • Various

Newsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter to receive all articles of the week in your mailbox.

 

Partners

enraf nonius

apa

fontys

vpt

kiné care

ICMSU

  • Home
  • About
  • Team
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Jobs
  • Newsletter archive
AP-SMALL-WHITECopyright 2010 - 2019 Anatomy & Physiotherapy. All Rights Reserved.

Privacy Policy

AdBlock detected

We want to keep offering top-notch content for free. In order to keep up with the additional costs that we incurr with scaling our website, we need your help! Please turn off your adblocker or consider donating a small amount.

http://www.anatomy-physiotherapy.com/donate

Close
You can also just close this popup. It shows only once.
isApp.it
  • Articles
    Evidence based articles
    • Musculoskeletal
      • Upper extremity
        • Shoulder
        • Elbow
        • Wrist
        • Hand
      • Lower extremity
        • Hip
        • Knee
        • Ankle
        • Foot
      • Spine
        • Pelvis
        • Lumbar
        • Thoracic
        • Rib cage
        • Cervical
    • Other
      • Nervous
      • Circulatory
      • Nutrition
      • Aging
      • Pain
      • Various
  • Art & Design
    Anatomy related art
  • Videos
    Webinars & more
  • Create account
    Personal pages & favourites
  • Login
    Login to A&P
You are now being logged in using your Facebook credentials