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Original Articles

Rapid Communication Industrial wrist motions and incidence of hand/wrist cumulative trauma disorders

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Pages 1449-1459 | Published online: 31 May 2007
 

Abstract

One of the major research voids in the study of occupational hand/wrist cumulative trauma disorders (CTDs) is the lack of quantification of the relationship between the known kinematic risk factors, such as wrist angle and repetition, and CTD risk. A previously published article in this journal (Marras and Schoenmarklin 1993) reported the descriptive results from a quantitative surveillance study performed in industry in which worker's wrist motions were monitored on the factory floor. The wrist motion components that were monitored on each subject were position, velocity, and acceleration measures in each plane of movement (radial/ulnar, flexion/extension, and pronation/supination). Tlie objective of this article was to form a metric that associates the degree of incidence of hand/wrist CTDs with those types of wrist motions that were significant in the earlier paper. Of all the kinematic parameters measured, multivariate analysis of the motion data revealed that acceleration in the flexion/extension plane discriminated the best between groups of low and high incidence rates of CTDs. The epidemiological association between flexion/extension acceleration and CTD incidence rate is compatible with results from empirical studies and theoretical models in the physiologic and biomechanical literature. The flexion/extension acceleration values from this study can serve as preliminary motion benchmarks that establish relative risk levels of CTDs for hand-intensive, highly repetitive jobs that do not require hand tools. Industrial practitioners can use this methodology, along with other accepted tools, to enhance ergonomic assessments of jobs.

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