Abstract

Low back pain (LBP) is common in elite athletes. Several peripheral and central factors have been identified to be altered in non-athletic LBP populations, however whether these alterations also exist in elite athletes with LBP is unknown. The aim of this study was to determine whether elite basketballers with a history of persistent LBP perform worse than those without LBP at a lumbar muscle endurance task, a lumbar extension peak-torque task, and a lumbar motor imagery task. An observational pilot study. Twenty junior elite-level male basketballers with (n=11) and without (n=9) a history of persistent LBP were recruited. Athletes completed a lumbar extensor muscle endurance (Biering-Sorensen) task, two lumbar extensor peak-torque (modified Biering-Sorensen) tasks and two motor imagery (left/right lumbar and hand judgement) tasks across two sessions (48 hours apart). Performance in these tasks were compared between the groups with and without a history of LBP. Young athletes with a history of LBP had reduced lumbar extensor muscle endurance (p<0.001), reduced lumbar extension peak-torque (p<0.001), and were less accurate at the left/right lumbar judgement task (p=0.02) but no less accurate at a left/right hand judgement task (p=0.59), than athletes without a history of LBP. Response times for both left/right judgement tasks did not differ between groups (lumbar p=0.24; hand p=0.58). Junior elite male basketballers with a history of LBP demonstrate reduced lumbar extensor muscle endurance and lumbar extension peak-torque and are less accurate at a left/right lumbar rotation judgement task, than those without LBP.

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