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. 2022 Jun 9:10:e13564.
doi: 10.7717/peerj.13564. eCollection 2022.

Role of active joint position sense on the upper extremity functional performance tests in college volleyball players

Affiliations

Role of active joint position sense on the upper extremity functional performance tests in college volleyball players

Guillermo Mendez-Rebolledo et al. PeerJ. .

Abstract

Background: It has been well established that proprioception plays a decisive role in shoulder stability and sport performance. Notwithstanding, there is a lack of clear association between active joint position sense (AJPS) and the performance of upper-extremity functional performance tests. The aim of this study was to determine whether the AJPS of the shoulder complex is associated with the performance of college volleyball players with the following functional tests: Y-Balance Test-Upper Quarter (YBT-UQ), Closed Kinetic Chain Upper-Extremity Stability Test (CKCUEST), and Seated Medicine Ball Throw (SMBT). The secondary aim was to investigate whether the magnitude of the proprioception error through the AJPS had the ability to act as a predictor for functional test scores.

Methods: Cross-sectional study with a convenience sampling. Healthy college volleyball players (≥12 h of training/week), 30 males and 22 females, between 18 and 26 years of age were included. AJPS of the shoulder (90° of flexion (90°Flex), 90° of internal rotation at 90° of abduction (90°IR/ABD), 90° of external rotation at 90° of abduction (90°ER/ABD)) and three upper-extremity functional performance tests (YBT-UQ, CKCUEST and SMBT) were assessed. A Pearson's test and a stepwise multiple linear regression analysis were used to determine possible associations and relationships between outcome measures, respectively.

Results: The analysis revealed that AJPS at 90°IR/ABD and 90°ER/ABD were the only proprioceptive variables with an association to the YBT-UQ and SMBT. Despite these relationships, only the AJPS at 90°IR/ABD was associated with the performance of the YBT-UQ in; superolateral direction (β = -0.7; 95% CI [-1.3 to 0.1]; p = 0.025); inferolateral direction (β = -1.5; 95% CI [-2.1 to -0.8]; p = 0.001); and composite score (β = -0.8; 95% CI [-1.3 to -0.3]; p = 0.002). From these, AJPS at 90°IR/ABD mainly explained the variability of YBT-UQ (inferolateral direction) performance (R2 = 0.32; %R2 = 0.32). Our findings allow for a possible expanded role for proprioception as a contributing factor in upper limb motor control during functional movements. Further research is required to explore and distinguish the associations between proprioception, motor control and sport performance involving the upper limbs.

Keywords: CKCUEST; Functional performance tests; Kinesthesia; Proprioception; Repositioning test; SMBT; Shoulder; YBT.

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Conflict of interest statement

Guillermo Mendez-Rebolledo is an Academic Editor for PeerJ.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Predicted values against the standardized residuals (Z-score) of sport performance tests scores obtained from the multiple linear regression analysis.
(A) YBT-UQ Superolateral, (B) YBT-UQ inferolateral, (C) YBT-UQ Composite score, (D) CKCUEST, (E) SMBT Dominant limb, (F) SMBT bilateral. MLR, multiple linear regression; YBT-UQ, Y-Balance Test Upper Quarter; CKCUEST, Closed Kinetic Chain Upper Extremity Stability Test; SMBT, Seated Medicine Ball Throw.

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