{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"Dr. Angelica Lang: Shaping the Future of Shoulder Health","description":" Dr. Angelica Lang knows most of the people she sees have to keep working, even if they have shoulder pain. &amp;nbsp; As an assistant professor at the University of Saskatchewan and director of the Musculoskeletal and Ergonomics Lab at the Canadian Centre for Rural and Agricultural Health, Lang\u2019s goal is to reduce that pain \u2014 keeping patients on the job. &amp;nbsp; \u201cA lot of daily life has to be done with your hands,\u201d she said. \u201cThe base of that is your shoulder. It allows you to position your hand in all these different ways.\u201d &amp;nbsp; Lang knows the importance of movement. She grew up in Melfort, Sask., playing hockey, soccer, volleyball, along with track and field. A Huskies track athlete, she found her calling in kinesiology, leading her to a specialization in the clinical biomechanics of the shoulder. &amp;nbsp; Her passion for understanding the shoulder, a joint unique in its movement and demands, drove her towards an MSc in Biomechanics under Dr. Clark Dickerson, a shoulder expert. &amp;nbsp; &quot;This combines math, which I already liked, with movement, which I'm really getting into,&quot; she said. \u201cHow you perform your work, how you get injured at work, or how a different disorder might influence your movement, and then cause a functional problem.\u201d &amp;nbsp; Lang said at least 40 per cent of people who suffer from a rotator cuff injury still endure shoulder pain up to a year later. That pain can cause sleep issues, and eventually it becomes unsustainable. &amp;nbsp; \u201cMy question is, does it matter how long you\u2019ve had pain?\u201d she said. \u201cIs it the way that they move that\u2019s setting them up to not necessarily get better?\u201d &amp;nbsp; Her laboratory is one of the first to look at the time elapsed since an initial injury, and the role of  ongoing shoulder pain as a confounding or influencing factor in that patient\u2019s recovery. &amp;nbsp; \u201cOnce the pain happens, there's some sort of compensation to avoid these painful positions,\u201d said Lang, whose research team is studying 60 people from Saskatoon and rural Saskatchewan, to assess differences in shoulder pain. &amp;nbsp; A significant part of Lang's work involves the musculoskeletal health of breast cancer survivors, particularly those who\u2019ve undergone mastectomies and reconstructions. &amp;nbsp; &quot;It's fairly well documented that breast cancer survivors have upper limb dysfunction after their treatment,\u201d Lang said. \u201cI\u2019m interested in what that means for their functional abilities.\u201d &amp;nbsp; Participants in those studies often make periodic trips to Saskatoon, for assessments at the Musculoskeletal and Ergonomics Lab at the Canadian Centre for Rural and Agricultural Health. &amp;nbsp; In this episode, Lang shows us the \u201cRotopod\u201d farm equipment simulator, designed to simulate the seated position farmers often stay in for long hours during seeding, spraying and harvest. &amp;nbsp; Her team examines movement and biomechanics in agricultural settings, particularly how whole body vibrations from machinery affect farmers. They use advanced motion tracking systems, like the Vicon motion capture system and Inertial Measurement Units, to study body movement in various scenarios, both in the lab and when research crews drive to farms and mines across Saskatchewan, to observe work duties in the field. &amp;nbsp; Last summer, her team visited farmers on the job near Aylesbury, Biggar, Clavet, and Debden, Saskatchewan. They tracked their movement as they performed five tasks, including using an overhead drill, lifting a shovel, climbing and dumping a heavy bag, and pruning a shrub. Lang and a pair of graduate students watched farmers put cattle through a squeeze chute \u2014 a task that can be challenging for both the operator and the animal. &amp;nbsp; \u201cIt\u2019s something we never would have been able to measure had we only had them come to the lab,\u201d said Lang. \u201cBy being able to be specific to their job and make the recommendations specific to farming demands, hopefully that will help.\u201d Throughout the conversation, Dr. Lang credited her team and colleagues for their contributions and stressed the significance of combining different fields of study to advance understanding and treatment of musculoskeletal disorders. &amp;nbsp; \u201cThat\u2019s motivating to me as a researcher,&quot; said Lang. &quot;The people that we're working with, they see the value in what we're doing, they support us.&quot; ","author_name":"Researchers Under the Scope","author_url":"https:\/\/medicine.usask.ca\/research\/index.php#ConnectWithUs","html":"<iframe title=\"Libsyn Player\" style=\"border: none\" src=\"\/\/html5-player.libsyn.com\/embed\/episode\/id\/29469013\/height\/90\/theme\/custom\/thumbnail\/yes\/direction\/forward\/render-playlist\/no\/custom-color\/88AA3C\/\" height=\"90\" width=\"600\" scrolling=\"no\"  allowfullscreen webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen oallowfullscreen msallowfullscreen><\/iframe>","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/assets.libsyn.com\/secure\/content\/166277388"}