| Literature DB >> 19919715 |
Alice Kongsted1, Charlotte Leboeuf-Yde.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Non-specific low back pain (LBP) is known to be a fluctuating condition and there is a growing realisation that it consists of different subgroups of patients. The detailed course of pain is not known since traditional methods of data collection do not allow very frequent follow-ups. This is a limitation in relation to identification of subgroups with different course patterns. The objective of this pilot study was to see if it is possible to identify characteristic course-patterns of non-specific LBP in patients treated in a primary care setting.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19919715 PMCID: PMC2781014 DOI: 10.1186/1746-1340-17-11
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chiropr Osteopat ISSN: 1746-1340
Definitions of the categories used to describe the identified course patterns
| Categories used to describe the early course | Definitions |
|---|---|
| Improved | ≥ 2 days reduction in LBP-days/week when comparing week 4 to week 1 |
| Unchanged | The same number of LBP-days +/- 1 day when comparing week 4 to week 1 |
| Worsened | ≥ 2 days more with LBP-days/week when comparing week 4 to week 1 |
| Mainly recovered | A maximum of one week with any LBP-days during the late course |
| Stays in the initial category | The number of LBP-days stays within the limits of the category that was assigned in the early course |
| Moves towards mainly improved | Moves from unchanged or worse in the early course to being improved (reporting ≥ 2 days reduction in LBP-days/week when compared to week 1), and has a maximum of one week outside that category |
| Fluctuating | Fluctuates between improved, unchanged, or worse as compared to week one |
| Moves towards mainly worsened | Moves from improved or unchanged in the early course to being worse (reporting ≥ 2 days more with LBP-days/week than in week 1), and has a maximum of one week outside that category |
Possible combinations of early and late course into final categories
| At the 4th week | Late courses which the early course can possibly be combined with |
|---|---|
| Improved | Mainly recovered |
| Unchanged | Mainly recovered |
| Worsened | Mainly recovered |
The possible combinations that form thirteen categories, which describe pain courses during 18 weeks. First the appropriate category "at the 4th week" was chosen and afterwards the subsequent course.
Figure 1The percentage of LBP patients who responded to SMS-questions for each week among those who accepted inclusion at the first visit to a chiropractor.
Duration of pain at baseline, type of treatment, and response to the first treatment
| Participants | n = 78 |
|---|---|
| acute (1 - 7 days) | 45% |
| chronic (> 3 months) | 19% |
| missing | 3% |
| manipulation | 85% |
| mobilization | 14% |
| soft tissue technique | 60% |
| information/advice | 82% |
| exercise (any type) | 32% |
| much better | 12% |
| better | 36% |
| unchanged | 33% |
| worse | 12% |
| much worse | 5% |
| missing | 3% |
Duration of pain and type of treatment registered at the first visit to a chiropractor. Self-reported status after 1st treatment was collected by means of automatic test messages.
Figure 2The mean number of reported LBP-days following the initial visit to a chiropractor for each week during an 18-week study.
Percentage distribution of the defined course patterns in 78 patients with LBP [n (%)]
| 5th to 18th week | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Improved | 11 (14%) | 31 (40%) | NA | 7 (9%) | 0 | 49 (63%) |
| Unchanged | 3 (4%) | 2 (3%) | 6 (8%) | 12 (15%) | 0 | 23 (30%) |
| Worsened | 0 | 1 (1%) | 0 | 4 (5%) | NA | 5 (6%) |
| (missing) | 1 (1%) | 0 | 0 | 0 | NA | 1 (1%) |
| 15 (19%) | 34 (44%) | 6 (8%) | 23 (29%) | 0 | 78 (100%) | |
Refer to Table 1 for definitions of the categories. NA = non-applicable.
Figure 3Examples of individual LBP courses within the categories holding at least 5% of participants.
Figure 4Number of LBP-days during the entire 18-weeks study within each defined course pattern.