| Literature DB >> 30258567 |
Brigitte Wirth1, Tobias Potthoff1, Sandra Rosser1, Barry Kim Humphreys1, Eling D de Bruin2,3.
Abstract
Background: Besides low back pain (LBP), also neck pain (NP) and mid back pain (MBP) are common health issues in adolescence. Psychological factors are regarded as main risk factors for spinal pain in adolescence, but recent studies suggest that the importance of physical factors might be underestimated. The purpose of this study was to summarize the results of studies on physical risk factors for adolescent NP and MBP.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescent; Mid back pain; Neck pain; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30258567 PMCID: PMC6151922 DOI: 10.1186/s12998-018-0206-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chiropr Man Therap ISSN: 2045-709X
Fig. 1Flowchart of study search, eligibility and inclusion
Summary of study characteristics of included studies
| Author, year | Title | Pain localization | Pain assessment: questionnaire | Study design | Participants: number (m/f) age | Investigated physical factors | Main results | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cudre-Mauroux et al., 2006 [ | Relationship between impaired functional stability and back pain in children: an exploratory cross-sectional study | Upper and lower back | Week prevalence | Cross-sectional | Functional stability (Matthiass Test using a new scoring system) | No association between Matthiass test and upper back pain in the last week. | < 60%/14 | |
| Dolphens et al., 2012 [ | Sagittal standing posture and its association with spinal pain. | Neck, thoracic spine, low back | Lifetime and one-month prevalence, concomitant doctor visit | Cross-sectional | Global sagittal alignment (pelvic displacement, trunk lean angle, body lean angle) and local spinopelvic parameters (e.g. number of vertebrae in the lumbar lordosis, vertebral level of apex, pelvic orientation in the sagittal plane) in habitual standing using digital images, inclinometry and accelerometry. | Neck pain: | 12/14 | |
| Dolphens et al., 2013 [ | Classification system of the normal variation in sagittal standing plane alignment. | Neck, thoracic spine, low back | Lifetime and one-month prevalence, concomitant doctor visit | Cross-sectional | Global sagittal alignment (pelvic displacement, trunk lean angle, body lean angle) and local spinopelvic parameters (e.g. number of vertebrae in the lumbar lordosis, vertebral level of apex, pelvic orientation in the sagittal plane) in habitual standing using digital images, inclinometry and accelerometry. | Cluster analysis: 3 clusters of global alignment: neutral, sway-back, leaning-forward. | 11/14 | |
| Dolphens et al., 2014 [ | Classification system of the sagittal standing alignment in young adolescent girls | Neck, thoracic spine, low back | Lifetime and one-month prevalence, concomitant doctor visit | Cross-sectional | Global sagittal alignment (pelvic displacement, trunk lean angle, body lean angle) and local spinopelvic parameters (e.g. number of vertebrae in the lumbar lordosis, vertebral level of apex, pelvic orientation in the sagittal plane) in habitual standing using digital images, inclinometry and accelerometry. | 3 postural subtypes | 9/14 | |
| Perry et al., 2008 [ | Fitness, motor competence and body composition as correlates of adolescent neck/shoulder pain: an exploratory cross-sectional study. | Neck/shoulder (posterior neck and upper trapezius) | Lifetime and one-month prevalence, pain duration more than 3 months | Cross-sectional | 1608 (825/783) 14.1 ± 0.2 | Upper and lower limb power (seated basketball throw, standing long jump) | Boys: | 13/14 |
| Straker et al., 2008 [ | Sitting spinal posture in adolescents differs between genders, but is not clearly related to neck/shoulder pain: an observational study. | Neck/shoulder | Lifetime, one-month and point prevalence | Cross-sectional | 1470 (713/757) 14.1 ± 0.2 | Sitting spinal posture (photographs, 7 sagittal angles | Adolescents with neck/shoulder pain: 2 degrees less trunk angle and 1 degree less cervicothoracic angle. After controlling for gender, no differences between the groups with and without neck pain. | 9/14 |
| Straker et al., 2009 [ | Relationships between prolonged neck/shoulder pain and sitting spinal posture in male and female adolescents. | Neck/shoulder | Month prevalence, pain duration more than 3 months | Cross-sectional | 1593 (814/779) 14.1 | Sitting spinal posture (photographs, 7 sagittal angles | Adolescents with prolonged NSP: | 11/14 |
| Wirth et al., 2013 [ | Spine Day 2012: spinal pain in Swiss school children - epidemiology and risk factors | Neck, thoracic spine, low back | Lifetime prevalence, recurrence, pain intensity, consequences (leisure activities, school absence, doctor visit, medication) | Cross-sectional | 434 (211/223) 10.4 ± 2.8 | Trunk functional stability (Matthiass test) | No association of the outcome parameters with neck pain or mid back pain. | 9/14 |
Quality assessment of the included studies
| Study | Study purpose | Literature | Design | Sample | Outcomes | Results | Data variability | Conclusions | Total score | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study design | Bias (Y = 0, | Description | Justification | Description | Reliability | Validity | Report of statistics | Appropriate analysis | Clinical importance | Dropouts | Estimates provided | Appropriate | ||||
| Cudre et al., 2006 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N/Y | N | N | Y/N | Y | N | NA | Y | Y | 8 |
| Dolphens et al., 2012 [ | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | N | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | NA | Y | Y | 12 |
| Dolphens et al., 2013 [ | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | NA | Y | Y | 11 |
| Dolphens et al., 2014 [ | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | NA | Y | N | 9 |
| Perry et al., 2008 [ | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | NA | Y | Y | 13 |
| Straker et al., 2008 [ | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | N | Y | Y | N | N | Y | N | NA | Y | Y | 9 |
| Straker et al., 2009 [ | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | NA | Y | Y | 11 |
| Wirth et al., 2013 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | N/Y | N | Y | N | N | Y | Y | Y/N | NA | Y | Y | 9 |
The results of both reviewers are stated only where they differed
Y Yes, N No
Definitions of angles used to describe the sitting and standing posture
| Angle | Lines forming the angle |
|---|---|
| Sitting posture [ | |
| Cervicothoracic angle | Line 1:SP T12 – SP C7 |
| Line 2:SP C7 – Tragus (ear) | |
| Craniocervical angle | Line 1:SP C7 – Tragus (ear) |
| Line 2:Tragus (ear) – Canthus (eye) | |
| Head flexion | Line 1:Canthus (eye) - Tragus (ear) |
| Line 2:Vertical line through Tragus (ear) | |
| Lumbar angle | Line 1:Greater trochanter – ASIS |
| Line 2:ASIS – SP T12 | |
| Neck flexion | Line 1:Tragus (ear) – SP C7 |
| Line 2:Vertical line through SP C7 | |
| Pelvic tilt | Line 1:Greater trochanter – ASIS |
| Line 2:Vertical line through Greater trochanter | |
| Trunk angle | Line 1:Greater trochanter – SP T12 |
| Line 2:SP T12 – SP C7 | |
| Standing posture [ | |
| Body lean angle | Line 1:Lateral malleolus – SP C7 |
| Line 2:Vertical line through SP C7 | |
| Craniovertebral angle | Line 1:Tragus (ear) – SP C7 |
| Line 2:Horizontal line through SP C7 | |
| Pelvic displacement angle | Line 1:Lateral malleolus – Greater trochanter |
| Line 2:Vertical line through Greater trochanter | |
| Trunk lean angle | Line 1:Greater trochanter – SP C7 |
| Line 2:Vertical line through SP C7 | |
ASIS anterior superior iliac spine, SP Spinous process
Results per outcome variable
| Outcome variable | Changes in adolescents with NSP | No changes in adolescents with NSP | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sitting posture | Cervicothoracic angle | Slightly decreased in adolescents with NSP, if not adjusted for gender [ | |
| Craniocervical angle | Straker et al., 2008 [ | ||
| Straker et al., 2009 [ | |||
| Head flexion | Straker et al., 2008 [ | ||
| Straker et al., 2009 [ | |||
| Lumbar angle | More lordotic/smaller lumbar angle in adolescents with prolonged NSP after controlling for gender [ | Straker et al., 2008 [ | |
| Neck flexion | Straker et al., 2008 [ | ||
| Straker et al., 2009 [ | |||
| Pelvic tilt | Increased anterior pelvic tilt in adolescents with prolonged NSP after controlling for gender [ | Straker et al., 2008 [ | |
| Trunk angle | Decreased in adolescents with prolonged NSP, if not adjusted for gender [ | ||
| Standing posture | Body lean angle | Sway back posture = large trunk lean angle and body lean angle in boys with neck pain [ | Dolphens et al., 2012 [ |
| Dolphens et al., 2014 [ | |||
| Craniovertebral angle | Anteroposition of the head = smaller craniovertebral angle in boys with neck pain; more lifetime doctor visits in girls with anteroposition of the head [ | ||
| Pelvic displacement angle | Dolphens et al., 2012 [ | ||
| Dolphens et al., 2013 [ | |||
| Dolphens et al., 2014 [ | |||
| Trunk lean angle | Increased trunk lean angle = increased posterior trunk tilt in boys with neck pain [ | Dolphens et al., 2014 [ | |
| Trunk | Functional stability (Matthiass test) | Wirth et al., 2013 [ | |
| Asymmetry (forward bending test) | Wirth et al., 2013 [ | ||
| Spinal mobility (fingertip-floor distance) | Wirth et al., 2013 [ | ||
| Endurance (sustained back extension test, abdominal curls) | Boys: lower odds for NSP when back muscle endurance reduced; girls: U-shape between NSP and back muscle endurance, higher odds for NSP when abdominal muscle endurance increased [ | ||
| Upper limb | Upper limb power (seated basketball throw) | Boys: higher odds for NSP when upper limb power increased; girls: lower odds for NSP when upper limb power increased [ | |
| Grip strength | Perry et al., 2008 [ | ||
| Shoulder flexibility (shoulder stretch) | Girls: lower odds for NSP when shoulder flexibility decreased [ | ||
| Other | Coordination (single leg stance) | Wirth et al., 2013 [ | |
| Motor competence (neurodevelopmental index) | Perry et al., 2008 [ | ||
| Lower limb power (standing long jump) | Boys and girls: higher odds for NSP when lower limb power increased [ | ||
NSP neck shoulder pain