Abstract

This study questioned whether postural sway increase in low back pain subjects was related to impaired spine mobility, and especially to a decrease in the range of motion, which was assumed to represent structural spine stiffness. Ten low back pain subjects and ten healthy control subjects performed spine flexion-extension and spine side bending tests, and standing posturographic examination in different experimental conditions. Low back pain subjects showed increased postural sway along the antero-posterior axis and reduced side bending, i.e. posturographic and range of motion parameters varied in the opposite direction. Moreover, no correlation was found between these two types of parameters. Although significant, the slight decrease in spine side bending did not seem sufficiently great to disturb the low amplitude movements that maintain postural equilibrium. Hence, it was concluded that postural sway increase in low back pain is not related to a reduced spine range of motion, but might be linked to an increase in muscular active tension, which reduces dynamic mobility capacity.

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