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다양한 다리 꼬아 앉은 자세에 따른 골반과 척추 각도 및 볼기 압력 비교 KCI 등재

A Comparison of Pelvic, Spine Angle and Buttock Pressure in Various Cross-legged Sitting Postures

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한국전문물리치료학회지 (Physical Therapy Korea)
한국전문물리치료학회 (Korean Research Society of Physical Therapy)
초록

The purpose of this study was to investigate the kinematic and kinetic changes that may occur in the pelvic and spine regions during cross-legged sitting postures. Experiments were performed on sixteen healthy subjects. Data were collected while the subject sat in 4 different sitting postures for 5 seconds: uncrossed sitting with both feet on the floor (Posture A), sitting while placing his right knee on the left knee (Posture B), sitting by placing right ankle on left knee (Posture C), and sitting by placing right ankle over the left ankle (Posture D). The order of the sitting posture was random. The sagittal plane angles (pelvic tilt, lumbar A-P curve, thoracic A-P curve) and the frontal plane angles (pelvic obliquity, lumber lateral curves, thoracic lateral curves) were obtained using VICON system with 6 cameras and analyzed with Nexus software. The pressure on each buttock was measured using Tekscan. Repeated one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to compare the angle and pressure across the four postures. The Bonferroni's post hoc test was used to determine the differences between upright trunk sitting and cross-legged postures. In sagittal plane, cross-legged sitting postures showed significantly greater kyphotic curves in lumbar and thoracic spine when compared uncrossed sitting posture. Also, pelvic posterior tilting was greater in cross-legged postures. In frontal plane, only height of the right pelvic was significantly higher in Posture B than in Posture A. Finally, in Posture B, the pressure on the right buttock area was greater than Posture A and, in Posture C, the pressure on the left buttock area was greater than Posture A. However, all dependent variables in both planes did not demonstrate any significant difference among the three cross-legged postures (p>.05). The findings suggest that asymmetric changes in the pelvic and spine region secondary to the prolonged cross-legged sitting postures may cause lower back pain and deformities in the spine structures.

저자
  • 강선영(연세대학교 대학원 물리치료학과) | Sun-young Kang
  • 김승현(연세대학교 대학원 의공학과, 연세의료공학연구원) | Seung-hyeon Kim
  • 안순재(연세대학교 대학원 의공학과, 연세의료공학연구원) | Soon-jae Ahn
  • 김영호(연세대학교 보건과학대학 의공학과, 연세의료공학연구원) | Young-ho Kim
  • 전혜선(연세대학교 보건과학대학 물리치료학과 및 보건과학연구소) | Hye-seon Jeon 통신저자