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Correlation of disability and pain with postural balance among women with chronic low back pain

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Correlation of disability and pain with postural balance among women with chronic low back pain

Guilherme Carlos Brech; Silvia Ferreira Andrusaitis; Gabriela Faller Vitale; Júlia Maria D'Andréa Greve

Hospital das Clínicas da Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de São Paulo (HCFMUSP), Laboratory for Motion Study from the Orthopedics and Traumatology Institute (IOT), São Paulo/SP, Brazil

INTRODUCTION

Low back pain is one of the most common musculoskeletal complaints and, from a public health perspective, is the most costly (1,2). In most cases, it is benign and disappears within six weeks, but approximately 20% of individuals with lumbar pain do not show any improvement in their condition, which may progress to chronic low back pain. This chronic condition is difficult to manage and is correlated with many mechanical alterations (3).

Maintenance of postural balance under static or dynamic conditions is essential for any functional activity (4). In individuals with chronic low back pain, the degree of control may change such that performing daily tasks becomes compromised and the chronic nature of the disease is sustained (4-7). The mechanisms that lead to such abnormalities of postural control remain unclear. Pain is an important factor in mechanical and neural alterations, but the extent to which it influences postural balance still cannot be determined. One of the hypotheses of this study is that the greater the lumbar pain and physical disability, the worse the patient's maintenance of both static and dynamic posture.

Thus, the aim of this study was to investigate the correlations between lumbar pain and the degree of disability and postural balance among women with chronic low back pain.

METHODS

Ten sedentary female volunteers aged 30 to 55 years presenting with nonspecific chronic low back pain were studied between April 2008 and April 2009. These women did not have any significant radiological abnormalities and did not have any neurological impairment. For patients to be included in the study, they needed to be free from vestibular abnormalities and musculoskeletal disorders of the hips and lower limbs. The exclusion criteria were as follows: unable to do the evaluation or worsening of the symptoms during the tests. This study was conducted with approval from our institution's ethics committee (no. 1248/07).

After the volunteers had been given an explanation of the study and had signed an informed consent, they were evaluated in accordance with an assessment protocol (8).

Assessment protocol

The assessment protocol was administered by two experienced evaluators with training in handling the assessment instruments.

All volunteers gave responses to the Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) questionnaire, using the version that was translated and validated for the Portuguese language (9), and the visual analogue scale (VAS) for pain (10) with regard to the daily frequency and intensity of their low back pain. Both the intensity and frequency of pain were represented by a straight line of 10 cm; 0 represented no pain, and 10 represented the worst and most frequent pain imaginable (10). In addition to the questionnaire and the pain scale, four balance tests were conducted on the Balance Master® force platform system (Neurocom International, Inc. Clackamas, Oregon, USA).

The tests performed included the following:

Clinical test of sensory interaction in balance

Static balance was assessed by means of the modified clinical test of sensory interaction in balance. This consists of assessing body sway under four sensory conditions while the individual is on the force platform: eyes open and closed on a stable surface and eyes open and closed on an unstable surface.

Each condition was repeated three times for ten seconds each, and the arithmetic mean of each of the attempts was used. The test measured the individual's speed of movement from the pressure center in degrees per second. For this test, the force platform was used with four coupled sensors. Diminution of the size of this variable was considered to be a positive outcome.

The variables studied were the mean sway speeds with eyes open (EO) and eyes closed (EC) on a stable surface and an unstable surface. The mean sways in the anteroposterior direction and mediolateral direction were also assessed under the same conditions.

The next three tests were performed with the aim of assessing functional limitations in activities of daily living.

Single-leg test

This test was performed with the subject standing on one leg on the force platform under four conditions: with eyes open and closed, for the left and right legs. Like in the Clinical test of sensory interaction in balance, each condition was repeated three times for ten seconds each, and the arithmetic mean of each of the attempts was used. The variables evaluated in this protocol were the mean sway speeds under EO and EC conditions on the left and right legs.

Sit-to-stand test

The sit-to-stand transfer test was performed on a platform with the individual initially sitting on a bench (height of 30 cm) without a backrest and with the knees flexed at 90º and the feet separated by 10 cm in relation to the heels. The arms were kept at the sides of the body throughout the test. The subjects were instructed to stand up safely and quickly. Three repetitions of the movement were made at intervals of 30 seconds between each attempt. The parameters measured were the mean weight transfer time, mean rising rate and sway speed while rising.

Step up-and-over

For this test, the subjects were instructed to go up a 10-cm high step, putting only one foot on the step. The other foot was expected to go directly over the step and down onto the platform without contacting the step. When both feet reached the platform, after going up the step, the subjects were instructed to remain as stationary as possible. Three attempts were made for each leg, starting with the left leg. The variables evaluated in this protocol were the mean weight transfer index, mean movement time and mean impact index.

In all of the balance tests performed in this study, the subjects could only make three attempts to perform each movement in each test. If they were unable to successfully perform the test after three incomplete attempts, the test was excluded.

Statistical analysis

Descriptive analyses (means and standard deviations, SD) were produced in relation to the following sample characteristics: age, VAS and ODI.

To verify that the data distribution was normal, the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test was used. Pearson correlations (weak, 0 to 0.3; moderate, 0.3 to 0.7 and strong, >0.7) were calculated between the VAS for pain intensity and frequency and the ODI of balance measurements (11).

The tests were conducted with a significance level of 5%.

RESULTS

The volunteers' mean age was 46.2 years. The mean intensity and frequency of pain, as determined by the VAS, were 4.9±3.1 and 6.5±2.3, respectively; the mean degree of disability measured by the ODI was 14.5±7.1. The patients were not taking any medication or on any treatment plan at the time of the study.

Table 1 shows that the ODI results were inversely correlated with the mean sway speed on a stable surface with eyes open (r = -0.631 and p=0.037).

Tables 2 to 4 show that there were no correlations between the intensity and frequency of pain and the degree of disability for the balance measurements of the Step upand-over, Single-leg and Sit-to-stand tests (p>0.05).

Table 2

Table 3

DISCUSSION

Chronic low back pain may be related to many causes, but poor neuromuscular control has been identified as an important factor in the occurrence and perpetuation of this musculoskeletal dysfunction (6,12). Nonetheless, no conclusion can yet be reached regarding the extent to which pain may be a determinant for postural control performance.

One of the hypotheses put forward in this study was that greater lumbar pain and physical disability would correlate with worse functional performance in terms of both static and dynamic posture maintenance. Thus, ten patients with chronic low back pain were selected to undergo four tests on the Balance Master® force platform system. Two of these tests evaluated static posture (the Clinical test of sensory interaction in balance and the Single-leg test), and two evaluated functional activities (the Step up-and-over test and the Sit-to-stand test).

The results obtained from this study did not confirm that there was a correlation between pain and poorer maintenance of postural balance. The mean sway speed on a stable surface with eyes open presented an inverse correlation with the degree of disability (ODI) (r = -0.631 and p=0.037); thus, the greater the value obtained in the ODI, the lower the sway speed. In principle, these data may signify good test performance given that there was less sway while maintaining the posture. This result is concordant with previous results from similar studies. Henry et al. (6) found that patients with low back pain presented with smaller magnitudes of peak movement from the pressure center and larger peak movements from the center of mass compared with individuals without a history of lumbar pain. These authors concluded that their results represented a choice made by these individuals with low back pain that involved a strategy for using their ankles to compensate for their balance.

Another strategy to correct postural balance among individuals without lumbar pain requires activation of the hip and lumbar spine muscles. In individuals with chronic low back pain, these muscles are activated (12). These findings were supported by the results from the study by Brumagne et al. (7), who determined that individuals with low back pain presented less variability in their choice of strategies. They observed that strategies using the ankles were most commonly used because of the inefficacy of their trunk muscles. Although the equipment used in this study did not have tools to confirm these balance compensation strategies, it can be presumed that the same events occurred among the patients in this study. Their smaller movements from the pressure center were due to a strategy for using the ankles, which was a more effective strategy than using their hips to maintain their balance, thereby resulting in movement through a smaller area. Among patients with chronic low back pain, this might be more effective while maintaining balance if the trunk and hip muscles were less active. Future studies must be performed to evaluate these suppositions.

The other balance measurements from the Step up-andover, Single-leg and Sit-to-stand tests did not present any correlations with the intensity or frequency of pain as assessed through the VAS or with the degree of disability as assessed through the ODI. It has been shown that individuals with chronic lumbar pain have abnormal postural balance in comparison with individuals without a history of pain, especially under conditions that require greater postural demands. Mientjes et al. (13) and Della Volpe et al. (4) did not observe any notable abnormalities in static balance among individuals with lumbar back pain; however, when these individuals were subjected to more challenging postures, such as with their eyes closed and staying upright on an unstable surface, the individuals with low back pain presented greater sway than the control group. Alternatively, in a systematic review study, Ruhe et al. (3) found that there was no correlation between pain intensity and the magnitude of excursion from the pressure center.

This study had certain limitations, especially with regard to the equipment used and the small sample size. The Balance Master® system is not considered to be the gold standard for assessing postural balance, but it is capable of assessing functional balance, thereby reproducing activities of daily living. Regarding the small sample size, although the incidence of chronic low back pain is high, its multifactorial nature means that there will be subgroups of patients with different characteristics within a given group of individuals presenting with pain. Thus, these subgroups should not be grouped within the same study (14). We sought to demarcate the most homogenous study group possible.

Considering the results encountered, new studies should be performed using assessment methods of greater specificity, including the use of a force platform. The findings may possibly be correlated with trunk and ankle muscle activity using surface electromyography during tests that are more challenging to postural balance.

The intensity and frequency of lumbar pain were not correlated with postural balance in women with chronic low back pain. Regarding postural balance, the only significant correlation identified was between the degree of disability and the sway speed on a stable surface with eyes open.

AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS

Brech GH, Andrusaitis SF and Vitale GF performed the data collection, analysis and preparation of the manuscript. D'Andréa Greve JM was supervisor and editor of the manuscript.

No potential conflict of interest was reported.

Email: guilhermebrech@yahoo.com.br / guibrech@gmail.com

Tel.: 5511 2661-6041

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    30 Aug 2012
  • Date of issue
    Aug 2012
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