头颈体位对头部旋转、颈肌紧张和症状的影响

Richard Harvey, E. Peper, Annette Booiman, A. Cedillo, Elizabeth Villagomez
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引用次数: 2

摘要

当人们坐在电脑屏幕前或坐着或走路时低头看智能手机等数字设备时,可能会出现懒散的姿势。本研究考察了两个过程:头部位置对感知的头部旋转的影响和颈部扭动对症状发展的影响。在第一项研究中,87名学生以头直立或头向前的姿势坐着,把头从一边转到另一边。92%的参与者报告说,与头向前的姿势相比,他们在头直立姿势时头部旋转的范围明显增加,而且在直立姿势时更容易旋转头部(M = 8.5;SD = 2.4)较懒散体位(M = 4.3;SD = 1.9), F(1,171) = 152, p < 0.001。在第二项研究中,125名学生被要求蜷缩脖子30秒。在扭颈后,98.4%的参与者报告说,在0(无)到10(严重)的范围内,他们的平均疼痛等级为5.3,其中包括头部压力(M = 6.7),颈部僵硬(M = 5.9),眼睛紧张(M = 4)和头痛(M = 3.8)。在12名学生中,用肌电图监测头向前和颈部挤压(压迫)对颈椎和斜方肌的影响。前倾体位和扭颈时的平均颈表肌电图(sEMG)高于基线前后,扭颈时的斜方肌肌电图(sEMG)高于基线前后。对于大多数参与者来说,他们的头颈位置对旋转的影响和颈部扭动对症状发展的影响是完全出乎意料的。体验性练习可以提供身体反馈,作为一种教育工具来教授意识,从而激励参与者改变他们的身体姿势,从而减少懒散和扭脖子的现象。
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The Effect of Head and Neck Position on Head Rotation, Cervical Muscle Tension, and Symptoms
Slouching posture may be observed when people interact with digital devices such as sitting at a computer screen or looking downwards at a smartphone while sitting or walking. The study investigated two procedures: the effect of head position on perceived head rotation and the effect of neck scrunching on symptom development. In the first study, 87 students sat in either a head-erect or head-forward position and rotated their heads from side to side. Ninety-two percent of the participants reported that they significantly increased their head rotation range during the head-erect position as comparted to the head-forward position, and that it was much easier to rotate their head in the erect position (M = 8.5; SD = 2.4) than in the slouched position (M = 4.3; SD = 1.9), F(1, 171) = 152, p < 0.001. In the second study, 125 students were asked to scrunch their neck for 30 seconds. After neck scrunching, 98.4% of participants reported experiencing an average pain rating of 5.3 on a scale from 0 (none) to 10 (severe), which consisted of pressure in the head (M = 6.7), stiff neck (M = 5.9), eye tension (M = 4) and headaches (M = 3.8). For a subset of 12 students, the effects of head-forward position and neck scrunching (compression) on cervical and trapezius muscles was monitored with electromyography. The average cervical surface electromyography (sEMG) was higher during head-forward position and neck scrunching than during pre- and post-baseline, and the average trapezius sEMG was higher during the neck scrunching than during pre- and post-baseline. For most participants, the effect of their head/neck position on rotation and neck scrunching on symptom development was a total surprise. Experiential practices can provide somatic feedback as an education tool to teach awareness and thus motivate participants to change their body posture so that they reduce slouching and neck scrunching.
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