Abstract
Objective: Exercise may reduce pain sensitivity. This phenomenon called exercise-induced hypoalgesia is observed in different types of exercises and involves the activation of endogenous pain modulation systems. Although the effect of limb exercise on pain sensitivity has often been tested, few studies explored the impact of back exercises that are often used to treat low back pain. The main objective is to measure the effect of back-muscle exercise on pain sensitivity and compare it to the effect of a limb-muscle exercise.Methods: Twenty-three participants who were pain-free performed a 4-min wrist flexion isometric contraction followed by a 4-min low back extension, separated by a 20-min break. Pressure pain thresholds were tested at two low back (S1 spinous process, lumbar erector spinae muscle) and two wrist (capitate bone, wrist flexor muscles) sites before and after each exercise. For each exercise, sites were considered as remote or local in relation to the muscles contracted during the exercise. An independent sample of 11 participants was recruited to confirm the influence of low back extension on pain sensitivity.Results: Wrist exercise induced a larger increase in pain sensitivity than back exercise at the remote site. Only wrist exercise induced a hypoalgesia effect at both the local and the remote sites. Back exercise induced a similar effect in the independent sample.Conclusions: This study showed that back and wrist exercises induced a distinct effect on pain sensitivity in participants who were pain-free. The wrist exercise induced a systemic reduction in pain sensitivity (locally and remotely), whereas the back exercise did not. This differential effect may be present because wrist exercise induced most fatigue compared with the back exercise.
Highlights
Chronic low back pain (CLBP) is the leading cause of disability worldwide [1]
Our results demonstrated that the wrist flexion produced a significant increase in pain sensitivity at local and remote sites
Our results indicate a greater reduction in pain sensitivity at remote sites after wrist exercise when compared with %pressure pain threshold (PPT) after back exercise
Summary
Chronic low back pain (CLBP) is the leading cause of disability worldwide [1]. Many clinical guidelines and reviews recommend exercise therapy as a first-line treatment and for routine use [2,3,4,5]. There is low-to-moderate quality evidence that they are more effective than minimal intervention to improve pain and disability [for a review, see [6]]. Specific changes in motor control [7, 8] and muscle size [9] can occur after exercises in LBP, systematic reviews have failed to associate these changes with changes in pain and disability [10,11,12]. This suggests that other factors could explain the efficacy of exercises targeting trunk muscles
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