Articles: low-back-pain.
-
Acta clinica Croatica · Dec 2022
MODERATING EFFECT OF BODY HEIGHT ON THE ASSOCIATION OF BODY WEIGHT AND DISABILITY CAUSED BY NON SPECIFIC CHRONIC LOW BACK PAIN IN WOMEN AND MEN.
The aim of the study was testing the hypothesis that body height has a moderating effect on the association of weight and chronic low back pain (LBP) induced disability, and that this moderating effect is different in women and men. We performed a nested cross-sectional analysis using data collected at baseline in a prospective cohort study conducted in 2008-2009 at a special hospital for medical rehabilitation in Croatia. The outcome was the Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire (RMDQ) score. ⋯ The interaction of sex, body weight and height was a significant predictor of the RMDQ score after adjustments for all covariates (increase of R2=0.13; p=0.001; false discovery rate <5%). In both sexes, the correlation between body weight and the RMDQ score was significantly moderated by body height but in opposite ways. In conclusion, the effects of body weight on physical disability are moderated by body height, but this moderation effect differs between women and men.
-
Adherence rates to guidelines show room for improvement, and increase in adherence to guidelines may potentially lead to better outcomes and reduced costs of treatment. To improve adherence, it is essential to understand the considerations of physiotherapists regarding the assessment and management of low back pain (LBP). The purpose of this study is to gain insight in the considerations of Dutch physiotherapists on adherence to the national physiotherapy guideline in the treatment of patients with LBP. ⋯ To improve adherence, the guideline should provide more information about addressing psychosocial prognostic factors, and Dutch physiotherapists might be trained in communication skills to better address patient expectations. A more extensive implementation process is warranted for the next guideline to increase the physiotherapists' knowledge of evidence-based treatment.
-
Arch Orthop Trauma Surg · Dec 2022
Investigating sagittal spinal alignment, low back pain, and clinical outcomes after total hip arthroplasty for lumbar hyperlordosis: a retrospective study.
Hip-spine syndrome, wherein flexion deformity of the hip might exaggerate normal lumbar lordosis (LL), was first described in 1983. It could result in subluxation of the posterior facets and cause low back pain (LBP). However, the clinical outcomes of total hip arthroplasty (THA) and spinal alignment changes in patients with lumbar hyperlordosis (hyper LL) remain unknown. We aimed to clarify the proportion of patients with hyper LL before THA and compare pre- and post-operative sagittal spinal alignment, LBP, and clinical outcomes between patients with hyper LL and those with normal LL. ⋯ Hyper LL in patients with hip osteoarthritis had no adverse effects on LBP and the clinical outcomes of THA. Hyper LL may partially result from a flexible and adaptable lumbo-pelvic structure.
-
African health sciences · Dec 2022
Review of core stability exercise versus conventional exercise in the management of chronic low back pain.
Exercise has been proven to be effective in the management of chronic low back pain. Over the years, core stability exercise (CSE) has gained popularity however there is lack of consensus on the best exercise treatment. ⋯ Compared to conventional exercise, core stability exercise is more effective in pain reduction and improved physical function in individuals with CLBP in the short term however, only two trials carried out follow-up assessments post intervention.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial
Cognitive functional therapy compared with core exercise and manual therapy in patients with chronic low back pain: randomised controlled trial.
Cognitive functional therapy (CFT) is a physiotherapy-led intervention that has evolved from an integration of foundational behavioral psychology and neuroscience within the physiotherapist practice directed at the multidimensional nature of chronic low back pain (CLBP). The current evidence about the comparative effectiveness of CFT for CLBP is still scarce. We aimed to investigate whether CFT is more effective than core training exercise and manual therapy (CORE-MT) in pain and disability in patients with CLBP. ⋯ Cognitive functional therapy was more effective than CORE-MT in disability at 8 weeks (MD = -4.75; 95% CI -8.38 to -1.11; P = 0.011, effect size= 0.55) but not in pain intensity (MD = -0.04; 95% CI -0.79 to 0.71; P = 0.916). Treatment with CFT reduced disability, but the difference was not clinically important compared with CORE-MT postintervention (short term) in patients with CLBP. There was no difference in pain intensity between interventions, and the treatment effect was not maintained in the mid-term and long-term follow-ups.