Background: Latent Myofascial Trigger Points are pain-free neuromuscular lesions that have been found to affect muscle activation patterns in the unloaded state. The aim was to extend these observations to loaded motion by investigating muscle activation patterns in upward scapular rotator muscles (upper and lower trapezius and serratus anterior) hosting Latent Myofascial Trigger Points simultaneously with lesion-free synergists for shoulder abduction (infraspinatus and middle deltoid). This approach allowed examination of the effects of these lesions on both their hosts and their lesion-free synergists in order to understand their effects on the performance of shoulder abduction. Methods: Surface electromyography was employed to measure th...
Background: Restoration of control of dynamic scapular motion by specific activation of the serratus...
Background: Poor activation of the serratus anterior (SA) muscle may result in abnormal shoulder rhy...
Purpose: It is commonly stated that supraspinatus initiates abduction; however, there is no direct e...
Background: Latent Myofascial Trigger Points (LMTrPs) are defined as certain pain-free hyperirritabl...
Kibler (Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise 30 (1998) 79) suggests that when there is dysfun...
Objective: Trigger points may result in referral pain of their close areas. Recent evidence suggests...
Abstract Background Upper trapezius (UT) pain with myofascial trigger points (MTrPs) can affect move...
Objectives: Load is used to increasingly challenge muscle function and has been shown to increase mu...
Study Design: Test-retest reliability study and single-group repeated measures design. Objectives: T...
Alterations in scapular muscle activity, including excess activation of the upper trapezius (UT) and...
This study aimed to characterize scapular muscle timing in stroke patients with and with- out should...
Multidirectional instability of the shoulder is a complex entity and it appears that factors in addi...
The shoulder complex joint is an extremely mobile joint and its stability is guaranteed mainly by th...
This is a cross-sectional study that aimed to compare upper trapezius (UT), middle trapezius (MT), l...
Background: Knowledge of the kinematics and associated muscular activity in individuals with scapula...
Background: Restoration of control of dynamic scapular motion by specific activation of the serratus...
Background: Poor activation of the serratus anterior (SA) muscle may result in abnormal shoulder rhy...
Purpose: It is commonly stated that supraspinatus initiates abduction; however, there is no direct e...
Background: Latent Myofascial Trigger Points (LMTrPs) are defined as certain pain-free hyperirritabl...
Kibler (Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise 30 (1998) 79) suggests that when there is dysfun...
Objective: Trigger points may result in referral pain of their close areas. Recent evidence suggests...
Abstract Background Upper trapezius (UT) pain with myofascial trigger points (MTrPs) can affect move...
Objectives: Load is used to increasingly challenge muscle function and has been shown to increase mu...
Study Design: Test-retest reliability study and single-group repeated measures design. Objectives: T...
Alterations in scapular muscle activity, including excess activation of the upper trapezius (UT) and...
This study aimed to characterize scapular muscle timing in stroke patients with and with- out should...
Multidirectional instability of the shoulder is a complex entity and it appears that factors in addi...
The shoulder complex joint is an extremely mobile joint and its stability is guaranteed mainly by th...
This is a cross-sectional study that aimed to compare upper trapezius (UT), middle trapezius (MT), l...
Background: Knowledge of the kinematics and associated muscular activity in individuals with scapula...
Background: Restoration of control of dynamic scapular motion by specific activation of the serratus...
Background: Poor activation of the serratus anterior (SA) muscle may result in abnormal shoulder rhy...
Purpose: It is commonly stated that supraspinatus initiates abduction; however, there is no direct e...