ID | 111396 |
Author |
Moriyasu, Akito
Rehabilitation Research Group for body and heart in Shikoku|Shikoku Physiotherapy Research group|Sakamoto Hospital
Akayama, Ryosuke
Japan Athletes Rehabilitation Trainers Association (JARTA)|Fitness and Conditioning School LibreBody
Wakimoto, Koichi
SEISEN Medical Corporation
Dakeshita, Toshifumi
SEISEN Medical Corporation
Inoue, Takuya
Rehabilitation Research Group for body and heart in Shikoku|Shikoku Physiotherapy Research group
Taichi, Akihiro
Shikoku Physiotherapy Research group
Murakami, Mitsuru
Japan Masters’ Athletics Association
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Keywords | Pole exercise
Vital capacity (VC)
Weight bearing index (WBI)
Physical flexibility
Exercise function
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Content Type |
Journal Article
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Description | Background: Discussion has been continued about the stability of the spine, and relationship with physical flexibility and exercise function. We have continued physical rehabilitation for various subjects, and proposed clinical application for pole exercise. In this study, we investigated the efficacy of standing pole exercise.
Study protocol: The subjects were 9 healthy adults, 26.9 ± 5.9 years old. Method included standing pole exercise and 2 tests before and after the exercise. The exercise has 6 movements, including lateral bending, axis rotation, wave motion, backward spiral, forward spiral and warp and rounding. The pole was 160 cm in length, 610 g in weight. Two tests were percentage vital capacity (%VC) and weight bearing index (WBI), which showed significant differences between before and after the exercise (p<0.01). Discussion and conclusion: Theoretical mode of spinal stability has relationship with inner/outer core stability, flexibility, expandability, curved angles in spinal alignment, and so on. In current study, standing pole exercise would be effective for increased %VC and WBI, which may be from increased flexibility and expandability. These data would be basal data for clinical application and research development in the future. |
Journal Title |
International Journal of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation
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ISSN | 23299096
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Publisher | OMICS International
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Volume | 6
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Issue | 1
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Start Page | 450
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Published Date | 2017-12-30
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Rights | ©2017 Moriyasu A, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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DOI (Published Version) | |
URL ( Publisher's Version ) | |
FullText File | |
language |
eng
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TextVersion |
Publisher
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departments |
Medical Sciences
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