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- Daisuke Fukui, Mamoru Kawakami, Tomonori Matsumoto, and Mitsuru Naiki.
- Spine Care Center, Wakayama Medical University Kihoku Hospital, 219, Myouji, Katsuragicho, Ito Gun, Wakayama, Japan. taiga26@zeus.eonet.ne.jp.
- Eur Spine J. 2018 Jan 1; 27 (1): 205-213.
PurposeAlthough psychological factors are assumed to be the primary cause of stress-related back pain, there have been no studies of the relationships between stress and low back pain in an animal model. The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of specific alternation of rhythm in temperature (SART) stress on gait abnormality using the CatWalk method in a rat model of low back pain caused by lumbar facetectomy.MethodsSixty rats were divided into three groups: the control, sham and experimental groups. Each group was then divided into non-SART stress and SART stress subgroups. We evaluated the behavioral changes 7 weeks postoperatively using the von Frey test and the CatWalk method.ResultsThreshold values for the hind paw in the SART stress subgroups were significantly lower than those in the non-SART stress subgroups. In the experimental group, significant changes by CatWalk in step cycle, stand time and average speed were observed under non-SART stress conditions, but SART stress resulted in additional significant changes in not only these parameters, but in other parameters including the duty cycle and swing time, compared with those in the control and sham groups.ConclusionsThe demonstration by CatWalk analysis may indicate that SART stress enhanced gait disturbance. In this animal model, we demonstrated for the first time that stress may be a factor involved in worsening of low back pain.
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