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Seyed Hossein Hosseinimehr

Seyed Hossein Hosseinimehr

Academic rank: Assistant Professor
ORCID: 0000-0003-0005-8483
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 2
HIndex:
Faculty: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
Address: Department of Physical Education and Sport Sciences, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Kurdistan, Sanandaj, Kurdistan,Iran
Phone: 0098-8733664600- داخلی 2288

Research

Title
The Comparison of Scapular Upward Rotation and Scapulohumeral Rhythm between Dominant and non-dominant Shoulder in Male Overhead Athletes and Non-athletes
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Overhead athletes; Scapular kinematic; Scapulohumeral rhythm
Year
2015
Journal MANUAL THERAPY
DOI
Researchers Seyed Hossein Hosseinimehr ، mehrdad anbarian ، Ali Asghar Norasteh ، javad fardmal ، mohammad taghi khosravi

Abstract

Previous studies have stated that the scapulohumeral rhythm dysfunction can make person prone to glenohumeral joint pathologies. The purpose of this study was to compare scapular upward rotation and scapulohumeral rhythm between dominant and non-dominant shoulder in male overhead athletes and non-athletes. Seventeen overhead athletes and seventeen non-athletes volunteered for this study. Two inclinometers were used to measure humeral abduction and scapular upward rotation in rest position, 45_, 90_ and 135_ humeral abduction in frontal plane. Findings indicated there was no significant asymmetry in scapular upward rotation and scapulohumeral rhythm in different abduction angles between dominant and non-dominant shoulder in non-athletes. In contrast, overhead athletes' dominant shoulders have more downward rotation in scapular rest position and more upward rotation in 90_ and 135_ shoulder abduction than non-dominant shoulders. Also, overhead athletes presented scapulohumeral rhythm asymmetry between dominant and non-dominant shoulder in 90_ and 135_ humeral abduction as dominant shoulders have less scapulohumeral rhythm ratio than non-dominant shoulders. Furthermore, overhead athletes dominant shoulders have more scapular downward rotation in scapular rest position, more scapular upward rotation in 90_ and 135_ humeral abduction and less scapulohumeral rhythm ratio in 45_, 90_ and 135_ humeral abduction than non-athletes in dominant shoulders. We suggest that clinicians should be aware that some scapular asymmetry may be common in some athletes. It should not be considered as a pathological sign but rather an adaptation to extensive use of upper limb.