Abstract
BackgroundComparing movements/postures in people with and without lower back pain (LBP) may assist identifying LBP-specific dysfunction and its relationship to pain or activity limitation. This study compared the consistency in lumbo-pelvic posture and movement (range and pattern) in people with and without chronic LBP (>12 week’s duration).MethodsWireless, wearable, inertial measurement units measured lumbar lordosis angle, range of movement (ROM) and lumbo-pelvic rhythm in adults (n = 63). Measurements were taken on three separate occasions: two tests on the same day with different raters and a third (intra-rater) test one to two weeks later. Participants performed five repetitions of tested postures or movements. Test data were captured automatically. Minimal detectable change scores (MDC90) provided estimates of between-test consistency.ResultsThere was no significant difference between participants with and without LBP for lordosis angle. There were significant differences for pelvic flexion ROM (LBP 60.8°, NoLBP 54.8°, F(1,63) = 4.31, p = 0.04), lumbar right lateral flexion ROM (LBP 22.2°, NoLBP 24.6° F(1,63) = 4.48, p = .04), trunk right lateral flexion ROM (LBP 28.4°, NoLBP 31.7°, F(1,63) = 5.9, p = .02) and lumbar contribution to lumbo-pelvic rhythm in the LBP group (LBP 45.8 %, F(1,63) = 4.20, NoLBP 51.3 % p = .044). MDC90 estimates for intra and inter-rater comparisons were 10°–15° for lumbar lordosis, and 5°–15° for most ROM. For lumbo-pelvic rhythm, we found 8–15 % variation in lumbar contribution to flexion and lateral flexion and 36–56 % variation in extension. Good to excellent agreement (reliability) was seen between raters (mean r = .88, ICC (2,2)).ConclusionComparisons of ROM between people with and without LBP showed few differences between groups, with reduced relative lumbar contribution to trunk flexion. There was no difference between groups for lordosis. Wide, within-group differences were seen for both groups for ROM and lordosis. Due to variability between test occasions, changes would need to exceed 10°–15° for lumbar lordosis, 5°–15° for ROM components, and 8–15 % of lumbar contribution to lumbo-pelvic rhythm, to have 90 % confidence that movements had actually changed. Lordosis, range of movement and lumbo-pelvic rhythm typically demonstrate variability between same-day and different-day tests. This variability needs to be considered when interpreting posture and movement changes.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12891-016-1250-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
Comparing movements/postures in people with and without lower back pain (LBP) may assist identifying LBP-specific dysfunction and its relationship to pain or activity limitation
We found that the LBP and Participants without low back pain (NoLBP) participants had similar standing lordosis angles and range of movement (ROM), with the exception of greater pelvic ROM in flexion (LBP group), and greater trunk and lumbar ROM in right lateral flexion (NoLBP group)
This study compared the consistency of lumbar lordosis, lumbo-pelvic range of movement (ROM) and lumbo-pelvic rhythm in people with and without low back pain, over three test sessions: two tests on the same day and a third test, 1 to 2 weeks later
Summary
Comparing movements/postures in people with and without lower back pain (LBP) may assist identifying LBP-specific dysfunction and its relationship to pain or activity limitation. This study compared the consistency in lumbo-pelvic posture and movement (range and pattern) in people with and without chronic LBP (>12 week’s duration). It is still unclear why some people recover from LBP pain and others do not, or how to match available interventions to careseekers [2]. Many studies have focused on movement irregularities and patterns in LBP. Movement range has been used to monitor recovery status following interventions, and various patterns of movement have been investigated, including lumbar versus pelvic (hip) contribution to trunk movement (often called lumbo-pelvic rhythm) [3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. Many non-invasive interventions continue to target movement dysfunction in people with LBP
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