Comparative joint position error in patients with non-specific neck disorders and asymptomatic age-matched individuals
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South African Journal of Physiotherapy
Abstract
Background: Neck pain is a common complaint worldwide and ranked seventh in 2010 as the
cause of ‘years lived with disability’ in Ghana. Proprioceptive dysfunction, measured by joint
position error (JPE) tests, indicates an association with neck pain frequency, dizziness and
balance problems in patients.
Objectives: To examine proprioceptive deficits of the neck using a laser pointer attached to
the head.
Methods: Twenty patients within the age group 21–60 years, with at least five points on the
neck disability index (NDI), and 20 age- and sex-matched controls with less than five points
on the NDI were recruited for this study. The JPE was determined wearing a headlight laser
pointer directed towards a Cartesian coordinate system adjusted to x/y = 0/0, placed on a
wall after returning from left and right rotation, flexion and extension. From starting in an
upright sitting position, facing the Cartesian coordinate system, each participant performed
five repetitions for each movement direction. The mean of five repetitions for each movement
direction was calculated as absolute error (AE), constant error (CE) and variable error (VE).
Results: Control participants showed larger JPE values for nearly all AE, CE and VE. After
repositioning from flexion controls showed an approximately 0.6 ° larger median JPE, and the
opposite for extension, with median differences between 1 ° and 2 °.
Conclusion: The results of this study do not reveal any meaningful differences between
patients with mild disabled neck movement compared with controls.
Clinical implications: Joint position error testing does not seem useful for patients with mild
neck disability.
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Research Article
Citation
Quartey, J., Ernst, M., Bello, A., Oppong-Yeboah, B., Bonney, E., Acquaah, K., et al., 2019, ‘Comparative joint position error in patients with non-specific neck disorders and asymptomatic agematched individuals’, South African Journal of Physiotherapy 75(1), a568. https://doi.org/10.4102/sajp. v75i1.568
