Prognosis
of Low Back Pain in General Practice
This study attempted to
identify what factors determined the duration of low back pain (LBP) episodes
and recurrence rate in a group of 269 general practice patients. The authors
studied a number of variables in their investigation: the duration of LBP before
the patient consulted a physician; the type of onset of back pain (sudden or
gradual); severity of back pain at initial visit; whether or not the patient
had a history of back surgery; whether the patient received physical therapy
for LBP symptoms; and the degree of disability from the LBP. The patients were
followed for one year after the initial assessment. The study found:
- “The median time to
recovery from the index episode was 7 weeks…70% of patients still had low
back pain after 4 weeks, 48% after 8 weeks, 35% after 12 weeks, and at the
end of the follow-up year 10% of the patients still had low back pain.”
- Recovery from LBP was
complicated by four factors:
- A longer history
of back pain before the initial visit to a physician.
- The presence of
sciatica.
- “Maximal lumbal flexion”
as determined by Schobers test.
- Receiving physical
therapy. “The results of the present study indicate that patients receiving
physical therapy during the first 5 weeks after the initial visit also
will take longer to recover from low back pain than those not receiving
physical therapy.” The study found that “the time to recovery was approximately
4 weeks longer for patients who received physical therapy than for patients
who did not receive physical therapy.”
The only factor that appeared
to influence the rate of relapse was disability as measured by reports of daily
functioning. The researchers found that the severity of pain and psychosocial
factors were not associated with the patients time to recover. However,
other aspects in the patients’ history—such as back surgery or chronic LBP—did
emerge as risk factors for recurring LBP.
van den Hoogen HJM,
Koes BW, Deville W, van Eijk JTM, Bouter LM. The prognosis of low back pain
in general practice. Spine 1997;22(13):1515-1521.
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