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INTERESTING NEW RESEARCH

8/21/2016

1 Comment

 
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​​A recent study by Ford JJ et al. (2015) examined the progress of 300 patients with sub-acute and chronic back pain of six weeks to six months. Patients were split into two groups. The first received guideline-based advice about their low back pain and resuming normal activities. The second group, were given individual therapy and advice. Ford’s findings highlighted interesting physical and psychological trends with patient care.
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What is Low Back Pain?

Low back pain is a particularly common symptom amongst the general population and in the sporting world. The staggering statistic is, 85% of us will experience low back pain at some point in our lifetime. In 50% of those cases, there will be more than one episode. So, there is no wonder it is one of the leading causes for sick days in the U.K.

In many cases making precise pathological diagnosis is difficult. Many pain-producing structures of the lumbar spine can cause low back pain. Such structures include, duramater, ligaments of the vertebral arches, vertebral venous plexus, muscles and fascia, laminae, vertebral bodies, annulus fibrous of intervertebral disk, and apophyseal joints.

​What Ford et al. Found

The main finding of the study was that patients who receive individualised therapy essentially exhibited the best improvements over the course of the study. In the final month of the study, the advice only group took two more days off work. Ford found that generic treatments may be a factor in mixed results with patient outcome. Showing, individualised treatments are arguably more effective when treating low back pain.
 
So What Does This Mean For Us?
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We need to stop putting up with low back pain! The ‘just live with it’ approach is not the way to go. Get to your therapist and get a treatment plan specific to you. You could be one less statistic of repetitive low back pain. Take days off work for holidays and events you enjoy, not because you need to rest due to your pain!

Author: J. Doran MSc (January, 2016)
1 Comment

    Meryn Churchouse

    Sports Therapist  

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