Physical Therapy in Sport
Volume 9, Issue 4 , Pages 177-184, November 2008

Shoulder proprioception is associated with humeral torsion in adolescent baseball players

University of Sydney, P.O. Box 170, Lidcombe, NSW 1825, Australia

Received 21 March 2008; received in revised form 6 July 2008; accepted 19 July 2008.

Abstract 

Objectives

To determine the relationship between the amount of humeral torsion and a measure of active proprioception in adolescent male throwing athletes.

Design

Cross-sectional laboratory study with uninjured subjects.

Setting

University of Sydney and NSW Institute of Sport.

Participants

Participants were 16 adolescent male baseball players (15.0–18.1 years old, SD=16.3) holding baseball scholarships at the NSW Institute of Sport.

Main outcome measures

The main outcome measures, active proprioception (shoulder rotation, in 90° of arm abduction moving towards external rotation, using the Active Movement Extent Discriminating Apparatus) and humeral torsion (using an ultrasound-assisted method), were measured bilaterally.

Results

A strong (r=0.88) and significant (p=0.001) correlation was found between increasing humeral retrotorsion and better active proprioceptive acuity in the non-dominant arm, while the relation was weaker (r=0.41) and did not reach statistical significance (p=0.120) for the dominant arm.

Conclusions

A cognitive processing capacity model, which suggests that greater humeral retrotorsion reduces neural processing requirements, has been proposed to explain the direct relationship between proprioceptive acuity and humeral retrotorsion.

Keywords: Retrotorsion, Antetorsion, Retroversion, Anteversion

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PII: S1466-853X(08)00095-3

doi:10.1016/j.ptsp.2008.07.002

Physical Therapy in Sport
Volume 9, Issue 4 , Pages 177-184, November 2008