Can Exercise Therapy Improve the Outcome of Microdiscectomy?
- 1 June 2000
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Spine
- Vol. 25 (12) , 1523-1532
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007632-200006150-00011
Abstract
A prospective randomized controlled trial of exercise therapy in patients who underwent microdiscectomy for prolapsed lumbar intervertebral disc. Results of a pilot study are presented. To determine the effects of a postoperative exercise program on pain, disability, psychological status, and spinal function. Microdiscectomy is often used successfully to treat prolapsed lumbar intervertebral disc. However, some patients do not have a good outcome and many continue to have low back pain. The reasons for this are unclear but impairment of back muscle function due to months of inactivity before surgery may be a contributing factor. A postoperative exercise program may improve outcome in such patients. Twenty patients who underwent lumbar microdiscectomy were randomized into EXERCISE and CONTROL groups. After surgery, all patients received normal postoperative care that included advice from a physiotherapist about exercise and a return to normal activities. Six weeks after surgery, patients in the EXERCISE group undertook a 4-week exercise program that concentrated on improving strength and endurance of the back and abdominal muscles and mobility of the spine and hips. Assessments of spinal function were performed in all patients during the week before surgery and at 6, 10, 26, and 52 weeks after. The assessment included measures of posture, hip and lumbar mobility, back muscle endurance capacity and electromyographic measures of back muscle fatigue. On each occasion, patients completed questionnaires inquiring about pain, disability and psychological status. Surgery improved pain, disability, back muscle endurance capacity and hip and lumbar mobility in both groups of patients. After the exercise program, the EXERCISE group showed further improvements in these measures and also in electromyographic measures of back muscle fatigability. All these improvements were maintained 12 months after surgery. The only further improvement showed by the CONTROL group between 6 and 52 weeks was an increase in back muscle endurance capacity. A 4-week postoperative exercise program can improve pain, disability, and spinal function inpatients who undergo microdiscectomy.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Is there a rational basis for post-surgical lifting restrictions? 2. Possible scientific approachEuropean Spine Journal, 1999
- Fitness for work after surgery for lumbar disc herniation: a retrospective studyEuropean Spine Journal, 1998
- Muscle fibre size and type distribution in thoracic and lumbar regions of erector spinae in healthy subjects without low back pain: normal values and sex differencesJournal of Anatomy, 1997
- ▪ Focus Issue on Lumbar Disc Herniation: Macro- and MicrodiscectomySpine, 1996
- Influence of lumbar and hip mobility on the bending stresses acting on the lumbar spineClinical Biomechanics, 1993
- The relationship between EMG activity and extensor moment generation in the erector spinae muscles during bending and lifting activitiesJournal of Biomechanics, 1993
- The Distress and Risk Assessment MethodSpine, 1992
- Assessment of Outcome in Patients with Low-Back PainSpine, 1992
- Comparison of Eight Psychometric Instruments in Unselected Patients with Back PainSpine, 1991
- Physical Measurements as Risk Indicators for Low-Back Trouble Over a One-Year PeriodSpine, 1984