학술논문

Slump Test: Effect of Contralateral Knee Extension on Response Sensations in Asymptomatic Subjects and Cadaver Study.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Spine (03622436). Feb2016, Vol. 41 Issue 4, pE205-E210. 6p.
Subject
*KNEE surgery
*KNEE injury treatment
*KNEE physiology
*SENSES
*DEAD
*PHYSIOLOGY
*BACK physiology
*SKELETAL muscle physiology
*SPINAL nerve roots
*COMPARATIVE studies
*RESEARCH methodology
*MEDICAL cooperation
*PHYSICAL diagnosis
*RESEARCH
*STRETCH (Physiology)
*EVALUATION research
*RANDOMIZED controlled trials
*LUMBAR pain
Language
ISSN
0362-2436
Abstract
Study Design: Part 1: A randomized, single-blind study on the effect of contralateral knee extension on sensations produced by the slump test (ST) in asymptomatic subjects. Part 2: A cadaver study simulating the nerve root behavior of part 1.Objective: Part 1: Test if contralateral knee extension consistently reduces normal stretch sensations with the ST.Part 2: Ascertain in cadavers an explanation for the results.Summary Of Background Data: In asymptomatic subjects, contralateral knee extension reduces stretch sensations with the ST. In sciatica patients, contralateral SLR also can temporarily reduce sciatica. We studied this methodically in asymptomatic subjects before considering a clinical population.Methods: Part 1: Sixty-one asymptomatic subjects were tested in control (ST), sham, or intervention (contralateral ST) groups and their sensation response intensity compared.Part 2: Caudal tension was applied to the L5 nerve root of 3 cadavers and tension behavior of the contralateral neural tissue recorded visually.Results: Part 1: Reduction of stretch sensations occurred in the intervention group but not in control and sham groups (P ≤ 0.001).Part 2: Tension in the contralateral lumbar nerve roots and dura reduced in a manner consistent with the responses in the intervention (contralateral ST) group.Conclusion: Part 1: In asymptomatic subjects, normal thigh stretch sensations with the ST reduced consistently with the contralateral ST, showing that this is normal and may now be compared with patients with sciatica.Part 2: Contralateral reduction in lumbar neural tension with unilateral application of tension-producing movements also occurred in cadavers, supporting the proposed explanatory hypothesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]