To analyze the amount of weight-bearing during tilt table increments, with a review of neutral and unilateral knee flexion postures.
Methods
There were 17 healthy participants enrolled in this study. The subjects were tilted from 10° to 90°, and their body weight was measured at each 10° increment. In the first test, both plantar pressures, with the subjects in neutral posture, were recorded. During the second and third tests, the angle of inclination was thus recorded and increased, with the subjects in unilateral knee flexion posture; flexion was maintained at 25° by attaching a cylindrical support to the tilt table at the level of the popliteal fossa.
Results
The study was divided into two types of postures: neutral and unilateral knee flexion. The percentage of body weight (%BW) between each leg during neutral posture was noted as not being statistically significant. The %BW of one side during tilt table inclination was significantly different between the two postures at 10° to 80° (p<0.05). The weight during unilateral knee flexion posture was lower as analyzed, regardless of tilt table inclination compared with that in neutral posture. We note that fifty percent of the ratio of %BW was noted at 33.12° and 38.76° in neutral and flexion postures, respectively.
Conclusion
The unilateral knee flexion could induce the effect of decreased body weight compared with non-flexion side. The results of this study will help in setting a safe and quantitative percentage of weight-bearing on the lower extremity during tilt training.
Citations
Citations to this article as recorded by
A feasibility study into the use of the tilt table in the early postoperative rehabilitation of patients undergoing sacrectomy surgery with plastic reconstruction within the Orthopaedic Oncology Service Isobel MacCallum, Abigail McCarthy, Alex Woollard, Craig Gerrand, Sherron Furtado Disability and Rehabilitation.2024; 46(3): 497. CrossRef
Differences in muscle activity during squat exercises according to the knee angle and standing angle of a sliding tilt table: A comparative study Tae Sung Park, Myung‐Jun Shin, Jong Ho Kang Physiotherapy Research International.2024;[Epub] CrossRef