Active Therapy for Chronic Low Back Pain
- 1 April 2001
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Spine
- Vol. 26 (8) , 897-908
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007632-200104150-00013
Abstract
Randomized prospective study of the effects of three types of active therapy on back muscle function in chronic low back pain patients. To quantify the effects of 3 months active therapy on strength, endurance, activation, and fatigability of the back entensor muscles. Many studies have documented an association between chronic low back pain and diminished muscular performance capacity. Few studies have quantified the changes in these measures following interventions using objective measurement techniques or related them to changes in clinical outcome. A total of 148 individuals (57% women) with chronic low back pain (age, 45.0 +/- 10.0 years; duration of low back pain, 10.9 +/- 9.5 years) were randomized to a treatment that they attended for 3 months: active physiotherapy, muscle reconditioning on devices, or low-impact aerobics. Before and after therapy, assessments were made of the following: trunk muscle strength (in flexion, extension, lateral bending, and axial rotation), erector spinae activation (maximal, and during forward bending movements), back extensor endurance (Biering-Sørensen test), and erector spinae fatigability (determined from changes in the median frequency of the surface electromyographic signal) during isometric and dynamic tests. A total of 132 of 148 patients (89%) completed the therapy. Isometric strength in each movement direction increased in all groups post-therapy (P < 0.0008), most notably in the devices group. Activation of the erector spinae during the extension tests also increased significantly in all groups and showed a weak, but significant, relationship with increased maximal strength (P = 0.01). Pretherapy 55% of the subjects showed no relaxation of the back muscles at L5 when in the fully flexed position; no changes were observed in any group post-therapy. Endurance time during the Biering-Sørensen test increased significantly post-therapy in all groups (P = 0.0001), but there were no significant changes in EMG-determined fatigability. Fatigability of the lumbar muscles at L5 (EMG median frequency changes) during the dynamic test increased post-therapy (P = 0.0001) without group differences. Significant changes in muscle performance were observed in all three active therapy groups post-therapy, which appeared to be mainly due to changes in neural activation of the lumbar muscles and psychological changes concerning, for example, motivation or pain tolerance.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- Personal Risk Factors for First-Time Low Back PainSpine, 1999
- Changes in paravertebral EMG spectrum parallel to strength increases after rehabilitation in chronic low back pain patientsClinical Rehabilitation, 1995
- Normal motion of the lumbar spine as related to age and genderEuropean Spine Journal, 1995
- Experimental evaluation of the national THINK FIRST head/spinal cord injury prevention programArchives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 1994
- Trunk Strength and Lumbar Paraspinal Muscle Activity During Isometric Exercise in Chronic Low-Back Pain Patients and ControlsSpine, 1993
- RADIOGRAPHIC DEMONSTRATION OF PARASPINAL MUSCLE WASTING IN PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC LOW BACK PAINRheumatology, 1992
- Comparison of Eight Psychometric Instruments in Unselected Patients with Back PainSpine, 1991
- Myoelectric signal conduction velocity and spectral parameters: influence of force and timeJournal of Applied Physiology, 1985
- Physical Measurements as Risk Indicators for Low-Back Trouble Over a One-Year PeriodSpine, 1984
- The function of the erectores spinae muscles in certain movements and postures in man*The Journal of Physiology, 1955