Artigo Revisado por pares

Reliability of Three Clinical Measures of Muscle Tone in the Shoulders and Wrists of Poststroke Patients

1991; American Occupational Therapy Association; Volume: 45; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.5014/ajot.45.1.50

ISSN

1943-7676

Autores

J. Scott Worley, Wanda Bennett, Georganna Miller, Mary Miller, Blanks Walker, Clarissa Harmon,

Tópico(s)

Cerebral Palsy and Movement Disorders

Resumo

Abstract Muscle tone was tested at the shoulders and wrists of 49 randomly selected poststroke patients with the use of resting joint position (SJP and WJP), resistance to passive movement or stiffness (SRM and WRM), and angle of appearance of resistance (SAR and WAR). Subjects were tested while seated with their arm supported in a suspension sling adapted for free movement. Five of the first and immediately repeated measurement pairs showed strong correlations and interrater reliability (SJP, .839; WJP, .900; SRM, .886; WRM, .904; SAR, .884 [p < .05]). The sixth (WAR) showed moderate reliability (.618, p < .05). Resting joint position measurements were most reliable among subjects with higher tone. The joint first measured had a slight order effect on SRM among subjects with higher muscle tone. Its second measurements were slightly increased over the first among those subjects whose shoulders were measured first and slightly reduced when measured immediately after the wrist. Reliable means of clinical evaluation of muscle tone at the shoulder and wrist are available if the influence of level of tone and the mutual influence of muscles tested are prudently considered.

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