• Spine · Feb 1999

    Mechanisms explaining the association between low back trouble and deficits in information processing. A controlled study with follow-up.

    • S Luoto, S Taimela, H Hurri, and H Alaranta.
    • Orton Rehabilitation Centre, Invalid Foundation, Helsinki, Finland.
    • Spine. 1999 Feb 1; 24 (3): 255-61.

    Study DesignA controlled study with a 6-month follow-up period.ObjectivesTo find an explanation for the association between impairment in information processing, i.e., slow reaction times, and chronic low back trouble.Summary Of Background DataLow back trouble, chronic pain in general, and depression have been associated with impaired cognitive functions and slow reaction times. It is a common phenomenon that the preferred hand performs better than the nonpreferred hand in motor tasks. The authors hypothesized that chronic low back trouble hampers the functioning of short-term memory in a way that leads the preferred hand to loose its advantage over the nonpreferred hand, but that the advantage would be restored during the rehabilitation.MethodsSixty-one healthy control subjects and 68 patients with low back trouble participated in the study. Reaction times for the preferred and nonpreferred upper limbs were tested. A multiway analysis of covariance was used to examine the group, handedness, and rehabilitation effects on reaction times. The hypothesis was specifically tested with a third-degree interaction: group-handedness-rehabilitation.ResultsA significant interaction among group, handedness, and rehabilitation was found (P = 0.05). At the beginning, the reaction times for the preferred hand were faster among the control subjects (P = 0.001), but not among the patients with low back trouble (P = 0.62). After the rehabilitation, the preferred hand was faster both among the control subjects (P = 0.001) and the patients with low back trouble (P = 0.0002). During the rehabilitation, back pain, psychological distress, and general disability decreased significantly among the patients with chronic low back trouble.ConclusionsThe results support the hypothesis that chronic low back trouble (i.e., pain, psychological distress, and general disability) hampers the functioning of short-term memory, which results in decreased speed of information processing among patients with chronic low back trouble.

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