View clinical trials related to Musculoskeletal System.
Filter by:It is known that posture is affected by various factors such as somatosensation, visual perception and cognition. In addition, it is also thought to affect conditions such as stress and anxiety through receptors. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between postural changes such as thoracic kyphosis, musculoskeletal problems, trunk position sense and anxiety in young individuals who were asymptomatic in terms of musculoskeletal problems.
This observational study evaluates the goodness of the IGOODI photogrammetric scan system in measuring anthropometry and estimating the body composition of 75 healthy subjects, comparing the results with the measurements taken using methods used in clinical practice, including body circumferences and bioimpedance analysis.
The increasing use of technological devices such as mobile phones and computers has become indispensable elements of daily life. Especially students are one of the groups that use communication tools most with the developing technology. This study was conducted to investigate the effect of technology addiction on academic achievement, musculoskeletal system and quality of life in young people.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of a cross-education rehabilitation intervention following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction on ameliorating the acute losses to function and performance. The cross-education phenomenon describes the strength gain in the opposite, untrained (surgical) limb following unilateral resistance training of the 'trained' (non-surgical) limb.
The annual frequency of injury among dancers has been reported to range between 23-84% while as many as 95% of professional dancers have ongoing pain. The discrepancy between the number of reported injuries and the amount of pain reported at any given time could be related to the definition of injury, or how dancers' themselves perceive injury with respect to pain and activity limitation thresholds. For many reasons, dancers may be dancing through or past what health care providers may conceive as injury. This can put them at risk of further or chronic injury. The purpose of this study is to understand at which point pain limits a dancer's ability to continue to perform and whether this is influenced by available medical services, a supportive dance environment, or other factors. In addition, the issue of non-reporting of injuries will be studied. This is very important as this will affect all measures of injury frequency and risk for dancers.