Objective: To compare the effectiveness of exercise and lifestyle modification therapy in treating shoulder symptoms in polio survivors with lower-extremity weakness.
Design: A randomized parallel group study.
Setting: Research laboratory.
Participants: Twenty-three subjects recruited from a cohort of 194 polio survivors who had participated in a previous study had bilateral hip-extensor and knee-extensor weakness and reported experiencing shoulder pain on a regular basis with daily activity.
Interventions: Subjects were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 treatment groups. Members of group 1 were placed on a home exercise program that focused on strengthening their hip and knee extensors. Members of group 2 were instructed in lifestyle modification techniques designed to avoid shoulder overuse. Members of group 3 received both interventions.
Main outcome measures: Shoulder symptoms were quantified in terms of number and severity. Isometric strength of bilateral hip and knee extensors was measured with a hand-held dynamometer.
Results: Symptoms improved in all 3 groups. However, members of the exercise-only group (group 1) were the only ones to show a significant difference in both number and severity of symptoms when pre- and posttreatment values were compared.
Conclusions: Both exercise and lifestyle modification therapies that focus on reducing the stress related to lower-extremity weakness are effective in treating shoulder overuse symptoms in polio survivors. A trend toward greater improvement in shoulder symptoms in subjects who participated in the exercise program and who also showed a trend toward increased knee-extensor strength supports muscle strength and/or endurance as a key factor.
Copyright 2002 by the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation