| Literature DB >> 29669082 |
Peter B O'Sullivan1, J P Caneiro2, Mary O'Keeffe3, Anne Smith4, Wim Dankaerts5, Kjartan Fersum6, Kieran O'Sullivan7.
Abstract
Biomedical approaches for diagnosing and managing disabling low back pain (LBP) have failed to arrest the exponential increase in health care costs, with a concurrent increase in disability and chronicity. Health messages regarding the vulnerability of the spine and a failure to target the interplay among multiple factors that contribute to pain and disability may partly explain this situation. Although many approaches and subgrouping systems for disabling LBP have been proposed in an attempt to deal with this complexity, they have been criticized for being unidimensional and reductionist and for not improving outcomes. Cognitive functional therapy was developed as a flexible integrated behavioral approach for individualizing the management of disabling LBP. This approach has evolved from an integration of foundational behavioral psychology and neuroscience within physical therapist practice. It is underpinned by a multidimensional clinical reasoning framework in order to identify the modifiable and nonmodifiable factors associated with an individual's disabling LBP. This article illustrates the application of cognitive functional therapy to provide care that can be adapted to an individual with disabling LBP.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29669082 PMCID: PMC6037069 DOI: 10.1093/ptj/pzy022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Ther ISSN: 0031-9023
Figure 1.Multidimensional factors associated with resilience and vulnerability to disabling low back pain.
Multidimensional Factors and Cognitive Functional Therapy (CFT) Management for 3 Illustrative Cases of Disabling Low Back Pain (LBP).[
| Examination Findings | Case 1 | Case 2 | Case 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interview | |||
| History | A 28-year-old man who was a manual worker (regularly lifting > 60 kg) developed LBP after a lifting/twisting incident 4 y earlier. | A 64-year-old man had a 43-y history of back pain related to his work as a mechanic. | A 26-year-old woman was involved 2 y earlier in a traumatic bike accident in which she hit a brick wall. |
| Pathoanatomical factors | Modic changes associated with disk degeneration at L4-L5/L5-S1 on MRI | Normal age-related changes on radiographs | Normal MRI |
| Pain characteristics | LBP was present at rest and was provoked with flexion loading postures, movements, and activities | LBP and tension were present at rest (sitting and standing) and were provoked with lying, sitting, standing, and forward bending postures, movements, and activities | Widespread thoracolumbar pain was greater on the left side |
| Psychological factors: Cognitive | Beliefs: “My disk is stuffed, and I fear I will never be able to work again.” | Beliefs: pain is related to “bad posture”; need to “sit up straight” and “brace back with bending.” | Belief: “I think I have developed bad habits.” |
| Pain hypervigilance | Pain hypervigilance | Pain hypervigilance | |
| Low pain self-efficacy | Low pain self-efficacy | Low pain self-efficacy | |
| Avoidance coping related to bending, lifting, and work and social settings | Acceptance: “I just live with it”; “I have given up.” | Avoidance of physical activity and housework | |
| Psychological factors: Emotional | Depressed mood, frustration and anger, stress sensitivity | Frustrated that nothing shows on scan and that he has no explanation for his pain | Posttraumatic stress response |
| Sense of loss of identity | “I am a stressed guy.” | “Thinking about the accident gives me pain.” | |
| Social factors | Socially isolated | Supportive family environment | Regarding working: “I enjoy it—although it is stressful.” |
| Lifestyle factors | Activity avoidance | Walks daily: “It relaxes me.” | Walks daily |
| Health-related factors | Generalized fatigue | Feels stressed, anxious, run down, and tense all the time | |
| Physical examination | |||
| Sensory profile | Localized hyperalgesia in lower lumbar spine structures and soft tissue with light palpation. | Hyperalgesia at L5-S1 and L4-L5 with palpation | Widespread hyperalgesia of thoracolumbar spine on left side (with light palpation) |
| Observation of pain-provoking functional behaviors | Sitting was associated with flexed lower lumbar spine and extended thorax with bracing of abdominal wall | Lying, sitting, and standing postures as well as forward bending and lifting were all associated with maintaining lumbar lordosis | Sitting erect and tense (back and abdominal wall muscles) |
| Guided behavioral experiments | Relaxing thoracic spine into flexion, enhancing lumbar lordosis via anterior pelvic tilt, and diaphragmatic breathing reduced pain in sitting | Relaxing back posture with reduced lordosis in sitting reduced LBP | Visualization of cycling over a bump caused her to jump and become tense |
| Conditioning | Deconditioning of legs and back muscles observed with sustained squat holds (limited to 10-s hold) | Generalized deconditioning specific to lifting and gardening | Generalized deconditioning |
| CFT intervention | |||
| No. of sessions | 8 sessions over 3 mo | 5 sessions over 3 mo | 3 sessions over 3 mo |
| Making sense of pain | Explain how negative beliefs, distress, lack of sleep, activity avoidance, and protective muscle guarding set up a vicious cycle of pain sensitivity and disability | Explain that the combination of “postural and lifting” beliefs and behaviors, bracing abdominal wall, loss of hope, fear avoidance, worry, lack of confidence, and pain hypervigilance set up a vicious cycle of pain sensitivity and disability | Explain that pain is associated with sensitization of spinal structures linked to a posttraumatic stress response, pain-related anxiety, vigilance, high levels of autonomic responses, muscle tension, poor sleep, and mixed endurance/avoidance coping behaviors |
| Exposure with control | Training of postural control strategies in sitting with anterior pelvic tilt, relaxed thoracic spine, and lateral costal breathing | Teach abdominal wall and back muscle relaxation (abdominal breathing) and relaxed (flexed) spinal postures in previously provocative sleeping, sitting, standing, bending, and lifting positions | Replace bracing core muscles with diaphragmatic breathing in sitting (breathing into the pain); focus on slow, relaxed nose breathing |
| Lifestyle change | Sleep habits: aim for 7 h/night, regular sleep time, and no alcohol or screen time before bed | Maintain walking program | Sleep habits: aim for 7 h/night and regular sleep time |
| Outcome | “I don’t fear my back anymore.” | “I now realize my back pain was linked to all the bad advice I was given previously about my posture and core.” | “I became mindful of my response to pain.” |
MRI = magnetic resonance imaging.
A full video of the examination can be accessed at https://enrol.apacpdguide.com.au/courses/masterclasses-in-musculoskeletal-clinical-reasoning-peter-osullivan.
An abridged video of the clinical journey can be accessed at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v = QCOKLuEirHM&feature = share&app = desktop.
Interview Prompts and Quotes From People With Disabling Low Back Pain That Exemplify Factors Influencing Pain and Behavioral Responses.
| Psychological Factors | Interview Prompts | Examples of Replies |
|---|---|---|
| Cognitive factors (thoughts about pain and coping with pain) | ||
| Cause/meaning | What do you think is the cause of the pain? | There is something damaged. |
| Consequences | Where do you see yourself in the future? | I will always have a weakness that I need to protect. It will get worse as I get older. |
| Vigilance | How much is your mind on your pain? | I can’t stop thinking about the pain. |
| Self-efficacy | How confident are you with your back? | I have no confidence in my back. |
| How confident are you to do the things in life that you value? | I have no confidence to play with my kids. | |
| Pain interference/disability | How has the pain impacted your life? | I can’t garden, work, or socialize because of my pain. |
| Coping with pain | How do you cope with your pain? | There is nothing that I can do for my pain. |
| Have you avoided important activities or modified the way you do them because of your pain? | I avoid anything that hurts my back. | |
| I always protect my back when I lift. | ||
| Catastrophic thoughts | What do you think will happen if you bend your back? | I fear my back is going to break. |
| Where do you see yourself in the future? | I fear I am going to end up in a wheelchair. | |
| Emotional factors (feelings about pain) | ||
| Emotional response to pain | How does the pain make you feel? | It's so intense I can’t think. |
| How does the pain affect you emotionally? | I panic when I get the pain and become hopeless about getting out of it. | |
| Anxiety | Do you worry about the pain? | The pain makes me feel anxious all the time. I worry it won’t get better. |
| Depressed mood | Does it get you down? In what way? | I am in a dark place; I have lost hope, and I see no way out. |
| Frustration/anger | Does the pain make you feel frustrated? What is it that frustrates you? | I feel so frustrated and angry that this has happened to me. |
| Influence of emotions on pain | Does how you feel (mood, worry, stress, fatigue) influence your pain? | My pain gets worse when I am stressed/anxious/down/tired. |
| Fear of damage | How do you feel when you bend and lift? | Every time I bend I am terrified I will prolapse my disk. |
| Fear of pain | How do you feel about the pain? | I am just frightened of the pain and the suffering. |
| When I get the pain I can’t do what I need for hours. | ||
| Pain predictability | Does the pain feel predictable to you? | I can’t predict it. |
| Pain controllability | Do you feel in control of the pain? Are there things you can do to control your pain? | I have little control over my pain. |
Figure 2.Triage of low back pain and the contribution of cognitive functional therapy. LBP = low back pain.
Figure 3.Radar graphs outlining the multidimensional profile of the 3 cases before and after the cognitive functional therapy (CFT) intervention.
Figure 4.Interplay of clinician- and patient-specific factors in the clinical journey with cognitive functional therapy.