Abstract

BackgroundKnowledge about the occurrence and distribution of musculoskeletal problems in early life is needed. The objectives were to group children aged 8 to 16 according to their distribution of pain in the spine, lower- and upper extremity, determine the proportion of children in each subgroup, and describe these in relation to sex, age, number- and length of episodes with pain.MethodData on musculoskeletal pain from about 1,000 Danish schoolchildren was collected over 3 school years (2011 to 2014) using weekly mobile phone text message responses from parents, indicating whether their child had pain in the spine, lower extremity and/or upper extremity. Result are presented for each school year individually.ResultsWhen pain was defined as at least 1 week with pain during a school year, Danish schoolchildren could be divided into three almost equally large groups for all three school years: Around 30% reporting no pain, around 40% reporting pain in one region, and around 30% reporting pain in two or three regions. Most commonly children experienced pain from the lower extremities (~ 60%), followed by the spine (~ 30%) and the upper extremities (~ 23%). Twice as many girls reported pain in all three sites compared to boys (10% vs. 5%) with no other statistically significant sex or age differences observed. When pain was defined as at least 3 weeks with pain during a schoolyear, 40% reported pain with similar patterns to those for the more lenient pain definition of 1 week.ConclusionDanish schoolchildren often experienced pain at more than one pain site during a schoolyear, and a significantly larger proportion of girls than boys reported pain in all three regions. This could indicate that, at least in some instances, the musculoskeletal system should be regarded as one entity, both for clinical and research purposes.

Highlights

  • Knowledge about the occurrence and distribution of musculoskeletal problems in early life is needed

  • Danish schoolchildren often experienced pain at more than one pain site during a schoolyear, and a significantly larger proportion of girls than boys reported pain in all three regions. This could indicate that, at least in some instances, the musculoskeletal system should be regarded as one entity, both for clinical and research purposes

  • The question remains, to what extent pain in different body regions overlap in individuals and if specific combinations of pain are prevalent in this age group

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Summary

Introduction

Knowledge about the occurrence and distribution of musculoskeletal problems in early life is needed. Musculoskeletal (MSK) pain can start early in life [1,2,3] and increases throughout adolescence [2, 4, 5]. To improve our understanding in this important area, and to Fuglkjær et al Chiropractic & Manual Therapies (2020) 28:45 learn when and how to intervene, we need more basic epidemiological knowledge about the occurrence and distribution of MSK problems in early life. MSK pain in different regions of the body (spine, upper extremity (UE) and lower extremity (LE)) has been described in detail in children participating in the Childhood Health, Activity and Motor Performance School Study (CHAMPS Study-DK) [8, 23,24,25,26]. The question remains, to what extent pain in different body regions overlap in individuals and if specific combinations of pain are prevalent in this age group

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