BioMed, Vol. 6, Pages 3: Clinical Pilates Diagnostic Bullseye Concept for Neck and Shoulder Musculoskeletal Patients: Case Studies


BioMed, Vol. 6, Pages 3: Clinical Pilates Diagnostic Bullseye Concept for Neck and Shoulder Musculoskeletal Patients: Case Studies

BioMed doi: 10.3390/biomed6010003

Authors:
Boon Chong Kwok
Justin Xuan Li Lim
John Kok Hong Wong

Background/Objectives: Pilates is a form of exercise that benefits people with bodily pain and movement limitations. The Clinical Pilates method assesses a patient through history taking and exercise testing to identify the patient’s problem side and directional preference. This study is a technical report of two case studies to evaluate the feasibility of the Clinical Pilates conceptual framework for the management of neck and shoulder musculoskeletal conditions. Methods: A conceptual framework on the use of the diagnostic bullseye for neck and shoulder movements are presented. To illustrate the application of the framework, two independent case studies with neck and shoulder pain were interpreted. These cases were assessed for upper and lower quadrant movement preferences using the Clinical Pilates method. Patient self-reported outcome measures included the pain numeric rating scale (/10), patient-specific functional scale (/10), and shoulder pain and disability index (%). Results: In both case studies, the clinical outcomes improved by more than 50% from the baseline. These improvements showed that the conceptualized framework is feasible for use among individuals with neck and musculoskeletal conditions. Conclusions: The neck and shoulder diagnostic bullseyes developed provide an extension from existing lower quadrant diagnostic bullseye. The feasibility of the Clinical Pilates method for neck and shoulder conditions was illustrated in the two case studies.



Source link

Boon Chong Kwok www.mdpi.com