Articles: low-back-pain.
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Cochrane Db Syst Rev · Jan 2010
Review Meta AnalysisBehavioural treatment for chronic low-back pain.
Behavioural treatment is commonly used in the management of chronic low-back pain (CLBP) to reduce disability through modification of maladaptive pain behaviours and cognitive processes. Three behavioural approaches are generally distinguished: operant, cognitive, and respondent; but are often combined as a treatment package. ⋯ For patients with CLBP, there is moderate quality evidence that in the short-term, operant therapy is more effective than waiting list and behavioural therapy is more effective than usual care for pain relief, but no specific type of behavioural therapy is more effective than another. In the intermediate- to long-term, there is little or no difference between behavioural therapy and group exercises for pain or depressive symptoms. Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimates of effect and may change the estimates.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Dose conversion between tapentadol immediate and extended release for low back pain.
Tapentadol, a novel, centrally acting analgesic with 2 mechanisms of action (mu-opioid receptor agonism and norepinephrine reuptake inhibition), has been developed in an immediate-release (IR) and an extended-release (ER) formulation. Determination of the safety and equianalgesic ratios for conversion between formulations is important for physicians with patients taking tapentadol IR who may want to switch to tapentadol ER, or vice versa, for any reason. ⋯ NCT00594516.
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During the past decades several rating scales have been developed to assess the functional status of patients with low back pain. ⋯ Further studies are required to evaluate the reliability, validity and sensitivity of the low back pain scoring systems used in the common clinical practice.
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Proc. West. Pharmacol. Soc. · Jan 2010
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative StudyPercutaneous microdiscectomy versus epidural injection for management of chronic spinal pain.
In this study we present the efficacy of aspiration of disc material employing the Stryker Disc Dekompressor during percutaneous microdiscectomy for the treatment of chronic spinal and radicular pain due to contained lumber disc herniation and compare the short-term outcome in such patients with those who received lumber epidural injection. A total of 50 patients with chronic lumber discogenic pain and radiculopathy were enrolled in this study and were randomized into two groups. Group 1 (n=26) underwent first time, single-level lumber discectomy at either L3-4, L4-5, or L5-S1 using the Stryker Disc Dekompressor for aspiration of disc material and Group 2 (n=24) received epidural steroid/local anesthetic injection. ⋯ We conclud that when standardized patient selection criteria are used, the disc DeKompressor is a safe and more effective treatment for radicular pain of discogenic origin than epidural injection with steroid/local anesthetic. Back pain of discogenic origin was more effectively treated with the epidural steroid/local anesthetic injection. Treatment of patients with radicular pain associated with contained disc herniation using the Dekompressor can be a safe and more effective procedure.
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Low back pain (LBP) is a prevalent and costly musculoskeletal disorder that often occurs in the working-age population. Although numerous physical activities have been implicated in its complex etiology, determining causation remains challenging and requires a methodologically rigorous approach. ⋯ There was strong evidence from six high-quality studies that there was no association between awkward postures and LBP. Similarly, there was strong evidence from three high-quality studies that there was no temporal relationship. Moreover, subgroup analyses identified only a handful of studies that demonstrated only weak associations and no evidence for other aspects of causality in certain specific subcategories. It is therefore unlikely that awkward occupational postures are independently causative of LBP in the populations of workers studied.