Low back pain (LBP) is the second greatest cause of disability in - TopicsExpress



          

Low back pain (LBP) is the second greatest cause of disability in the USA.1 USA data supports that in spite of an enormous increase in the health resources spent on LBP disorders, the disability relating to them continues to increase.2 The management of LBP is underpinned by the exponential increase in the use of physical therapies, opiod medications, spinal injections as well as disc replacement and fusion surgery.2 This is maintained by the underlying belief that LBP is fundamentally a patho-anatomical disorder and should be treated within a biomedical model.1 This is in spite of calls over a number of years to adopt a bio-psycho-social approach, and evidence that only 8–15% of patients with LBP have an identified patho-anatomical diagnosis, resulting in the majority being diagnosed as having non-specific LBP.3 The physiotherapy, manual therapy and medical professions have long focused on trying to find the magic ‘technique’, ‘muscle’, ‘injection’ or ‘surgical technique’ required to solve the problem of NSCLBP and PGP disorders. This reductionist approach to dealing with complex disorders in a simplistic manner clearly hasn’t delivered for our patients50 and contradicts current knowledge that NSCLBP should be considered within a multidimensional bio-psycho-social framework. In fact, it has been proposed that single-dimensional approaches may in fact exacerbate chronic disorders reinforcing a cumulative feedback loop.29 In response to the calls to manage NSCLBP from a bio-psycho-social perspective, a number of RCTs have tested cognitive behavioural approaches to more effectively manage the disorder. Yet systematic reviews of these approaches have failed to demonstrate greater efficacy than other active conservative approaches in managing NSCLBP.51 Possible reasons for this failure may relate to the lack of patient-centred and targeted management52 as well as a failure to address other dimensions such as neuro-physiological factors and maladaptive lifestyle and movement behaviours known to be associated with NSCLBP disorders.18 20 30 Ref.: OSullivan P. Its time for change with the management of non-specific chronic low back pain. Br J Sports Med. 2012 Mar;46(4):224-7. Epub 2011 Aug 4.
Posted on: Sun, 18 Jan 2015 18:32:11 +0000

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