The effect of sacroiliac joint manipulation on gluteus maximus muscle activity in asymptomatic participants
Date
2020-06-10
Authors
Worth, Kevin
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Abstract
Purpose: The effects of spinal manipulation are well documented; however there is a gap in
the current literature regarding the exact mechanisms underlying the effectiveness of spinal
manipulation. Further evidence is required to improve the understanding of the
neurophysiological effects of spinal manipulative therapy and its effect on muscle activity.
The objectives of this study were to investigate the effects of sacroiliac joint manipulation on
gluteus maximus muscle activity in an asymptomatic sample group when compared to a
placebo group
Methods: A randomized, controlled, pre-test, post-test repeated measures design allowed
for 28 participants, aged 18-40 years old, with sacroiliac joint dysfunction to be allocated into
either a sacroiliac joint manipulation or a placebo group. Muscle activity of the gluteus
maximus was measured before intervention and again 10 minutes post intervention. IBM
SPSS was used to analyse the data with significance set at (p=0.05). Repeated measures
ANOVA testing was used to determine the significance within and between groups.
Results: There was evidence of an improvement in the intervention compared with the
placebo group from pre to post for outcomes of Channel A mean and maximum values, and
for Channel B maximum values. In the other measures there was a trend observed but
insufficient evidence to conclude that it was a real effect. The partial eta squared values
were relatively small for these non-significant effects and medium to large for the significant
effects.
Conclusion: Analysis of the results revealed that there was evidence of an improvement in
the intervention group when compared with the placebo group in some of the outcomes
measured while other outcomes measured trended towards an improvement but lacked a
sufficiently large sample size to conclude that it was a statistically significant effect.
Description
Dissertation submitted in partial compliance for the Master’s Degree in Technology: Chiropractic Durban University of Technology, 2020.
Keywords
Sacroiliac joint, Electromyography, Manipulation, Muscle activity
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/3878