For people receiving health care for acute
and persistent low-back pain, symptoms will improve significantly in the first
six weeks, but pain and disability may linger even after one year, states a
large study published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).
Low-back
pain is a common condition that results in significant health care costs,
disability and absenteeism in workplaces. However, there
are differing views on how quickly and completely people recover from this
condition.
Researchers
from Australia and Brazil examined data from 33 studies (11 166 participants)
to understand the clinical course of pain and disability in people receiving
care for low-back pain. The study looked at more studies than previous reviews,
which allowed more precise estimates of the clinical course of acute low-back
pain as well as persistent low-back pain.
"Our
review confirms the broad finding of previous reviews that the typical course
of acute low-back pain is initially favourable: there is a marked reduction in
mean pain and disability in the first six weeks," comments Dr. Christopher
Maher, Director, Musculoskeletal Division, The George Institute for Global Health, The
University of Sydney, Australia. "Beyond six weeks, improvement slows and
thereafter only small reductions in mean pain and disability are apparent up to
one year."
At one
year, the patients who initially presented with acute low-back pain still
experienced some pain and disability but it was minimal; the typical
improvement in pain
intensity was about 90%. In contrast, those who initially presented
with persistent low-back pain experienced moderate levels of pain and
disability at one year; the typical improvement in their pain was only about
50%.
Maher
notes, "There is both good and bad news in our review. It is great that
people improve with care, but arguably there is room to do better, particularly
for people with persistent low-back pain. Generally, when people see results
like this they want to blame the clinician, but I think that is short-sighted.
One of the principal reasons we have not made more progress in the back pain
field is that research agencies do not take back pain research seriously.
Around the world, back pain research
is hugely underfunded relative to the burden of the disease. It's time for that
to change."
More
information: Research: http://www.cmaj.ca … /cmaj.111271
Commentary: http://www.cmaj.ca … /cmaj.120627
Commentary: http://www.cmaj.ca … /cmaj.120627
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