Head and shoulder posture variations in 160 asymptomatic women and men☆☆☆
Received 8 October 1996; accepted 19 March 1997.
Abstract
Objective: To quantitatively describe the postural alignment of the head and shoulders and the surface curvature of the thoracic spine in comfortable erect standing and to examine the effect of age and gender on head and shoulder alignment.
Design: Descriptive survey.
Setting: Gait research laboratory.
Participants: One hundred sixty asymptomatic volunteers aged between 17 and 83 years.
Main Outcome Measures: Five photographic measurements of head and shoulder posture in the coronal and sagittal planes and a photographic measurement of the surface curvature of the thoracic spine in the sagittal plane.
Results: Mean values of coronal head tilt, coronal shoulder angle, sagittal head tilt, sagittal C7-tragus angle, and sagittal shoulder-C7 angle were 180.1°, 181°, 172.1°, 131.1°, and 53.7°, respectively. The 95% confidence intervals for the means ranged between 1° and 3.8°. For each of the head and shoulder measurements there was no significant gender difference (p = .33 to .99). Of the five measurements, only sagittal C7-tragus angle was significantly correlated with age (r = .44), and none was correlated with surface curvature of the thoracic spine.
Conclusions: Head and shoulder posture was similar between genders. Only one postural description that has been described anecdotally was identified, ie, that age was related to the position of the head with respect to the trunk in the sagittal plane, although the strength of the association was of questionable clinical significance. In contrast, other longstanding assumptions were not supported, and accordingly, a forward head was not associated with increased thoracic curvature or upper cervical spine extension.
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School of Physiotherapy, Curtin University of Technology, Perth, Australia
Reprint requests to Dr. Sally Raine, School of Physiotherapy, Curtin University of Technology, GPO Box U1987, Perth 6001 Western Australia, Australia.
☆ Supported by the Physiotherapy Research Foundation, Fitzroy North, Victoria, Australia.
☆☆ No commercial party having a direct or indirect interest in the subject matter of this article has or will confer a benefit upon the authors or upon any organization with which the authors are associated.