| Literature DB >> 31871385 |
Hans-Rudolf Weiss1, Deborah Turnbull2.
Abstract
[Purpose] Although there is evidence that non-specific chronic pain can be influenced by physical therapy, some patients with scoliosis and chronic pain may benefit from additional brace treatment. The purpose of this review is to answer the question whether there are studies on the use of brace treatment in patients with scoliosis and pain and to investigate whether brace treatment does positively influence chronic pain. [Methods] A PubMed review has been undertaken using the key words (1) scoliosis and pain and brace treatment and (2) scoliosis and pain and orthotics. From both searches the studies were extracted that included a patient group with the diagnosis of a scoliosis and with additional chronic non-specific low back pain, treated with a brace.Entities:
Keywords: Brace treatment; Non-specific chronic low back pain; Scoliosis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31871385 PMCID: PMC6879412 DOI: 10.1589/jpts.31.960
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Phys Ther Sci ISSN: 0915-5287
Overview on the papers which were ‘off topic’ and how often one or more of the search terms were missing
| Total (n) | Term 1 missing (n) | Term 2 missing (n) | Term 3 missing (n) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Search 1 | 142 | 21 | 100 | 90 |
| Search 2 | 111 | 26 | 89 | 77 |
Multiple answers were possible. Term 1 was defined as ‘scoliosis’, term 2 as ‘pain’ and term 3 as ‘brace/orthosis’.
Fig. 1.The sagittal realignment test (SRT: left) and the de-lordosation test (DT: right) in standing position. In the positive case this test will immediately reduce chronic postural LBP (PLBP). The DT in the positive case will immediately reduce chronic LBP if this is due to instability low back pain (ILBP). Taken from12) (Creative Commons Attribution License).