The Prognosis of Low Back Pain in General Practice
- 1 July 1997
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Spine
- Vol. 22 (13) , 1515-1521
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007632-199707010-00019
Abstract
A prospective cohort study on low back pain in consecutive patients in general practice, in which potential prognostic indicators at baseline and at the 1-year follow-up examination were assessed by means of four weekly questionnaires. To identify prognostic indicators of the duration of low back pain in general practice and the occurrence of a relapse. Little is known about the prognosis of low back pain in general practice. Different designs and different results of preceding studies make drawing conclusions about the prognostic indicators, if any, of the course of low back pain in general practice difficult. For a period of 2 years, 15 general practitioners from Amsterdam and surrounding areas studied consecutive patients with chronic low back pain and those with a recent onset of low back pain. A large number of potential prognostic indicators were assessed at the initial visit. After the initial visit, each patient was monitored for a period of 12 months. The follow-up assessment was conducted with four weekly postal questionnaires. The associations among the potential prognostic indicators, the duration of the index episode, and the occurrence of a relapse were analyzed using multivariate Cox regression and logistic regression analysis, respectively. Of the 605 patients identified, 443 were included in the follow-up period of assessment; the questionnaires were completed by 269 patients. In general, patients with less severe low back pain participated less often or did not complete the follow-up study. Thirty-five percent of the population still experienced low back pain after 12 weeks, and 10% still experienced it after 1 year. Approximately three of every four patients whose index episode ended before the end of the follow-up period had one or more relapses within a year. The analysis resulted in a model with four variables predicting the duration of the low back pain, including "the duration of the low back pain preceding the initial visit," "receiving physical therapy," "pain intensity," and "history of back surgery." Daily functioning appeared to be the only variable that was significantly associated with the occurrence of a relapse. Only a few variables appear to be related to the clinical course of low back pain seen in general practice. In particular, the duration preceding the initial visit and, unexpectedly, receiving physical therapy were both associated with a longer duration of low back pain.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Treatment of Acute Low Back Pain — Bed Rest, Exercises, or Ordinary Activity?New England Journal of Medicine, 1995
- Clinical course and prognostic factors in acute low back pain: an inception cohort study in primary care practiceBMJ, 1994
- 1989 Volvo Award in Clinical Sciences: Reproducibility of Physical Signs in Low-Back PainSpine, 1989
- An historical perspective on low back pain and disabilityActa Orthopaedica, 1989
- Comparative Validity of the Sickness Impact Profile and Shorter Scales for Functional Assessment in Low-Back PainSpine, 1986
- Acute back pain: A control-group comparison of behavioral vs traditional management methodsJournal of Behavioral Medicine, 1986
- The validation of visual analogue scales as ratio scale measures for chronic and experimental painPAIN®, 1983
- A Study of the Natural History of Back PainSpine, 1983
- MEASUREMENT OF PAINPublished by Elsevier ,1974
- Measurement of back movement.Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, 1969