scholarly journals Rehabilitation Exercises for the Gluteus Medius Muscle Segments: An Electromyography Study

2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Damien Moore ◽  
Tania Pizzari ◽  
Jodie McClelland ◽  
Adam I. Semciw

Context:Many different rehabilitation exercises have been recommended in the literature to target the gluteus medius (GMed) muscle based mainly on single-electrode, surface electromyography (EMG) measures. With the GMed consisting of 3 structurally and functionally independent segments, there is uncertainty on whether these exercises will target the individual segments effectively.Objective:To measure individual GMed segmental activity during 6 common, lower-limb rehabilitation exercises in healthy young adults, and determine if there are significant differences between the exercises for each segment.Method:With fine-wire EMG electrodes inserted into the anterior, middle, and posterior segments of the GMed muscle, 10 healthy young adults performed 6 common, lower-limb rehabilitation exercises.Main Outcome Measures:Recorded EMG activity was normalized, then reported and compared with median activity for each of the GMed segments across the 6 exercises.Results:For the anterior GMed segment, high activity was recorded for the single-leg squat (48% maximum voluntary isometric contraction [MVIC]), the single-leg bridge (44% MVIC), and the resisted hip abduction–extension exercise (41% MVIC). No exercises recorded high activity for the middle GMed segment, but for the posterior GMed segment very high activity was recorded by the resisted hip abduction–extension exercise (69% MVIC), and high activity was generated by the single-leg squat (48% MVIC) and side-lie hip abduction (43% MVIC). For each of the GMed segments, there were significant differences (P < .05) in the median EMG activity levels between some of the exercises and the side-lie clam with large effect sizes favoring these exercises over the side-lie clam.Conclusions:Open-chain hip abduction and single-limb support exercises appear to be effective options for recruiting the individual GMed segments with selection dependent on individual requirements. However, the side-lie clam does not appear to be effective at recruiting the GMed segments, particularly the anterior and middle segments.

2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 544-551 ◽  
Author(s):  
Damien Moore ◽  
Adam I. Semciw ◽  
Jodie McClelland ◽  
Henry Wajswelner ◽  
Tania Pizzari

Context:The gluteus minimus (GMin) muscle consists of 2 uniquely oriented segments that have potential for independent function and have different responses to pathology and aging. For healthy young adults, it is unknown that which rehabilitation exercises specifically target the individual segments.Objective:To quantify segmental GMin activity for 6 common lower-limb rehabilitation exercises in healthy young adults and determine if significant differences exist in segmental activity levels between the exercises.Method:Six common lower-limb rehabilitation exercises were performed by 10 healthy young adults with fine-wire electromyography (EMG) electrodes inserted into the anterior and posterior segments of the GMin muscle.Main Outcome Measures:Electromyography signals were recorded, and median normalized exercise activity levels were reported and compared for each GMin segment across the 6 exercises.Results:High activity levels were generated in the anterior segment by the resisted hip abduction–extension exercise (51% maximum voluntary isometric contraction [MVIC]), whereas for the posterior segment, high activity levels were produced by the single-leg bridge (49% MVIC), the side-lie hip abduction (43% MVIC), the resisted hip abduction–extension exercise (43% MVIC), and the single-leg squat (40% MVIC). There were significant differences (P < .05) in the median electromyography activity levels for the anterior GMin segment but not for the posterior GMin segment across some of the exercises with large effect sizes.Conclusion:Targeted rehabilitation exercises graded by exercise intensity can be prescribed specifically for the anterior and posterior GMin segments to aid in restoration of hip function following injury or aging.


2017 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 418-436 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jay R. Ebert ◽  
Peter K. Edwards ◽  
Daniel P. Fick ◽  
Gregory C. Janes

Context:Gluteus medius rehabilitation is of critical importance given its role in pelvic and lower limb stability, and the known link between gluteus medius weakness and many lower limb conditions.Objective:To systematically review the literature and present an evidence-based graduated series of exercises to progressively load gluteus medius.Evidence Acquisition:A systematic literature search was conducted in January 2016 to identify studies reporting gluteus medius muscle activity as a percentage of maximal volitional isometric contraction (MVIC), during rehabilitation exercises. Studies that investigated injury free participants were included. No restrictions were placed on the type or mode of exercise, though exercises that could not be accurately replicated or performed within an independent setting were excluded. Studies that did not normalize electromyographic activity to a side lying MVIC were excluded. Exercises were stratified based on exercise type and %MVIC: low (0% to 20%), moderate (21% to 40%), high (41% to 60%), and very high (> 61%).Evidence Synthesis:20 studies were included in this review, reporting outcomes in 33 exercises (and a range of variations of the same exercise). Prone, quadruped, and bilateral bridge exercises generally produced low or moderate load. Specific hip abduction/rotation exercises were reported as moderate, high, or very high load. Unilateral stance exercises in the presence of contralateral limb movement were often high or very high load activities, while high variability existed across a range of functional weight-bearing exercises.Conclusions:This review outlined a series of exercises commonly employed in a rehabilitation setting, stratified based on exercise type and the magnitude of gluteus medius muscular activation. This will assist clinicians in tailoring gluteus medius loading regimens to patients, from the early postoperative through to later stages of rehabilitation.


2013 ◽  
Vol 459 ◽  
pp. 535-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rogério Sales Gonçalves ◽  
João Carlos Mendes Carvalho ◽  
Lucas Antonio Oliveira Rodrigues ◽  
André Marques Barbosa

The development of robotic devices to apply in the rehabilitation process of human lower limbs is justified by the large number of people with lower limb problems due to stroke and/or accidents. Thus, this paper presents a cable-driven parallel manipulator for lower limb rehabilitation which is composed by a fixed base and a mobile platform that can be connected to one cable at most six and can performing the movement of human gait and the individual movements of the hip, the knee and the ankle. This paper starts with a study of the basic movements of the lower limb. Then the kinetostatic and force analysis were presented. The graphical simulation and experimental tests of the cable-driven parallel structure for lower limb rehabilitation movements are presented showing the viability of the proposed structure.


Author(s):  
Jingang Jiang ◽  
Xuefeng Ma ◽  
Biao Huo ◽  
Xiaoyang Yu ◽  
Xiaowei Guo ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 672-674 ◽  
pp. 1770-1773 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fu Cheng Cao ◽  
Li Min Du

Aimed at improving the dynamic response of the lower limb for patients, an impedance control method based on sliding mode was presented to implement an active rehabilitation. Impedance control can achieve a target-reaching training without the help of a therapist and sliding mode control has a robustness to system uncertainty and vary limb strength. Simulations demonstrate the efficacy of the proposed method for lower limb rehabilitation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 92 ◽  
pp. 107103
Author(s):  
José Saúl Muñoz-Reina ◽  
Miguel Gabriel Villarreal-Cervantes ◽  
Leonel Germán Corona-Ramírez

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nurul Hasyikin Hasmuni Chew ◽  
Siti Marwangi Mohamad Maharum ◽  
Zuhanis Mansor ◽  
Irfan Abd Rahim

Author(s):  
Deyby Huamanchahua ◽  
Yerson Taza-Aquino ◽  
Jhon Figueroa-Bados ◽  
Jason Alanya-Villanueva ◽  
Adriana Vargas-Martinez ◽  
...  

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