Index to Chiropractic Literature
Index to Chiropractic Literature
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ID 24466
  Title Pilot study of spinal manipulation impact on sport-specific reaction time and core proprioception amongst college students with spine pain
URL http://www.tihcij.com/Articles/Pilot-Study-of-Spinal-Manipulation-Impact-on-Sport-Specific-Reaction-Time-and-Core-Proprioception-Amongst-College-Students-with-Spine-Pain.aspx?id=0000462
Journal Top Integr Health Care. 2016 ;7(1):Online access only 18 p
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Peer Review Yes
Publication Type Article
Abstract/Notes

Objective: To determine whether spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) beneficially affected reaction time and/or core proprioception in individuals with spine pain during two sport-specific simulation tasks. 

Methods: Fifty-four college students each stood on a force plate while holding a basketball in the triple threat position. After receiving a visual computer prompt to jump left their reaction time was recorded in milliseconds. Next, participants stood in a football player receiver position with fixed footing and were asked to rotate their body 90° to the left while being recorded with motion analysis cameras. Their ability to attain exactly 90° with their hips/core was recorded. Participants were then assigned to study groups based on absence or presence of spine pain; the latter group was further allocated to SMT or no SMT intervention groups. Following the intervention phase all participants repeated the baseline tests. A between-within repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) using between-subjects factor “group” and within-subjects factor “time” (baseline and post-test) was used to analyze study data. 

Results: There was no statistically significant difference for the reaction time task for group*time F(2,51) = 1.577, p = 0.219, r = 0.17. Similarly, for core proprioception angle there was no statistically significant effect for group*time, F(2,51) = 0.273, p = 0.762, r = 0.07. 

Conclusions: Preliminarily, a single spinal manipulation did not improve reaction time or the ability to increase approximation to 90° during the hip/core rotation task for chiropractic college students with low levels of spine pain.

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