Medicina (Dec 2022)

Changes in Trunk Muscle Activity during Unilateral Weight Bearing and Abnormal Postural Gait in Healthy Individuals

  • Sungwoo Paek,
  • Jungjoong Kang,
  • Bokyung Shin,
  • Jiyoon Jung,
  • Hanee Rim,
  • Mijeong Yoon,
  • Kyoungbo Lee,
  • Yeunjie Yoo,
  • Boyoung Hong,
  • Seonghoon Lim,
  • Joonsung Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina58121800
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 58, no. 12
p. 1800

Abstract

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Background and Objectives: Many people tend to carry their bags or baggage on only one side of their body. Due to smartphone use, people also tend to walk bent forward in a kyphotic posture. In this study, we aimed to assess trunk muscle activity changes due to weight-bearing, carried in the left or right hand, and using three different gait postures. Materials and Methods: We recruited 27 healthy participants (aged 19–75 years) with no history of LBP within the last 6 months before study participation. Electromyographic activities of the lower back and the abdominal muscles of the participants were evaluated using four-channel surface electromyography (EMG). Surface EMG recordings were obtained from four trunk muscles, including the flexor (rectus abdominis (RA), external oblique (EO)) and extensor muscles (lumbar erector spinae (LE), and the superficial lumbar multifidus (LM)), during unilateral weight-bearing tasks and with different gait postures (normal gait, with a sway back, and thoracic kyphosis). Results: In the “unilateral weight-bearing task”, there was a significant difference in the activity of all the trunk muscles between the weight-bearing limb side and the opposite side (p p p Conclusions: Our results indicate that abnormal gait posture and unilateral weight-bearing tasks may impair the balance of trunk muscles, increasing the incidence of LBP. However, further large-scale, prospective, controlled studies are warranted to corroborate our results.

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