Stressful
Life Events and Low Back Pain
This study attempted to
examine stressful life events in patients with idiopathic low back pain. The
researchers took into account individual predisposition and the psychosocial
resources available during the stressful life episode. The study divided 64
low back pain patients into two categories, those with organic causes (16 patients)
and those with an uncertain etiology (48 patients).
The most frequently cited
stressful life events included “severe illness of family member or close friend,”
“loss of job,” and “divorce.” When comparing the two groups of patients, the
researchers found no difference in the kind and number of stressful life events.
However, the idiopathic group recalled the events as significantly stressful,
causing long lasting disturbances in their daily life. The idiopathic patients
showed difficulty in coping with these events and a lack of support—which then
sparked feelings of helplessness and exhaustion—contributing to chronic low
back pain. The researchers suggest:
“In the assessment of
these patients, the attending physician should pay special attention to highly
stressful events while taking the history of the present illness, in particular
those events that create feelings of helplessness and exhaustion in their
patients. Our results might help determine which patients stand in need of
psychotherapeutic support or, in case of marked depression, of additional
antidepressant medication and thus help prevent the onset of chronicity in
patents with idiopathic low back pain.”
Lampe A, Sollner
W, Krismer M, et al. The impact of stressful life events on exacerbation of
chronic low back pain. Journal of Psychosomatic Research 1998;44(5):555-563.
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