Glenohumeral Translation in the Asymptomatic Athlete's Shoulder and Its Relationship to Other Clinically Measurable Anthropometric Variables
- 1 November 1996
- journal article
- other
- Published by SAGE Publications in The American Journal of Sports Medicine
- Vol. 24 (6) , 716-720
- https://doi.org/10.1177/036354659602400603
Abstract
To determine the degree of shoulder translation in uninjured athletes, we examined 76 Division I colle giate athletes (44 women and 32 men) for passive range of motion in both shoulders and for knee and elbow hyperextension. Translation was based on a scale of 0 to 3+. Shoulders with symptoms of pain or a history of instability or dislocation were excluded from this study. Forty-six shoulders had 0 anterior transla tion, 75 had 1+, and 31 had 2+. Thirteen shoulders had 0 posterior translation, 56 had 1 +, and 83 had 2+. Thirty-eight shoulders had 0 inferior translation, 105 had 1 +, and 9 had 2+. No shoulder had translation of 3+ in any direction. Twenty-four athletes, 12 men and 12 women, had translational asymmetry of a minimum of one grade in at least one direction. No shoulder was asymmetric in all three directions. There was a signif icant correlation between dominant hand and in creased translation; 19 of 24 athletes with asymmetric shoulders had greater translation in the nondominant extremity. There was no relationship between transla tion and range of motion, knee or elbow hyperexten sion, thumb-to-forearm distance, or years spent in sports participation. Asymmetry of shoulder translation may exist in the normal shoulder. This review shows that up to 2+ translation in any direction cannot be considered abnormal.Keywords
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