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Clinical Prediction Rule for Clinical Lumbar Instability

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Drexel University

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Low Back Pain

Treatments

Other: Core Stabilization

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01085448
DRX18590

Details and patient eligibility

About

The aim of this study is to determine if assessment of additional measures of trunk neuromuscular control will improve the ability to identify patients with low back pain who successfully respond to trunk stabilization exercises.

Question: What clinical characteristics are associated with patients that respond positively to a program of core stabilization exercises?

Hypothesis: Clinical characteristics that show a decrease in trunk motor control will be associated with a positive response to stabilization exercises.

Full description

Clinical identification of individuals with mechanical low back pain who would benefit from a program of stabilization exercises has been a struggle for the physical therapy profession. While changes in trunk muscle recruitment and motor control have been linked to patients with chronic low back pain and hypothesized to be adaptations for spinal instability, this has not been systematically established. However, a connection between spinal instability, poor trunk motor control, and low back pain is plausible. The real problem lies with the clinical identification of the subgroup of patients in either the acute or chronic phases of low back dysfunction who would most benefit from this approach to intervention.

In creating their preliminary clinical prediction rule, Hicks et al (2005), looked at many variables including patient demographics and characteristics, hip and trunk motion, special tests for instability, and functional measures of muscle performance. However, measures of the performance of core stabilizing muscles and assessment of trunk dynamic control/ coordination were not included as potential variables. The aim of this study is to determine if assessment of additional measures of trunk neuromuscular control will improve the ability to identify patients with low back pain who successfully respond to trunk stabilization exercises.

Enrollment

20 patients

Sex

All

Ages

21 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. duration of the current episode of low back pain less than 3 months,
  2. average pain intensity over past 3 days at least 4 on an 11 point (0 = no pain, 10 = worst pain ever) numeric pain rating scale,
  3. no medical intervention for low back pain in last 6 months,
  4. Oswestry score greater than 25%

Exclusion criteria

  1. permanent structural spinal deformity (e.g., scoliosis)
  2. history of spinal fracture or diagnosis of osteoporosis
  3. diagnosis of inflammatory joint disease
  4. signs of systemic illness or suspected non-mechanical LBP (i.e. spinal tumor or infection)
  5. previous spinal surgery
  6. frank neurological loss, i.e., weakness and sensory loss
  7. history of neurologic disease that required hospitalization,
  8. active treatment of another medical illness that would preclude participation in any aspect of the study or any lower extremity injury that would potentially alter trunk movement in standing
  9. leg length discrepancy of greater than 2.5 cm.
  10. pregnancy
  11. vestibular dysfunction

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

20 participants in 1 patient group

Low back pain
Other group
Description:
Individuals with current low back pain.
Treatment:
Other: Core Stabilization

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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