View clinical trials related to Low Back Pain.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety NVP-1203 in patients with Acute low back pain
Lumbar facet-joints are small, paired joints in the low back that provide stability, integrity and flexibility of movement to the spine. Diseased facet-joints may cause persistent low back pain, with significant socioeconomic impact. At present, there is insufficient high quality evidence to support the use of lumbar facet-joint injections (FJIs) in treating low back pain of less than 12 months' duration; the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) therefore did not approved their use in their 2009 publication. This study will investigate the feasibility of conducting a larger, definitive trial to assess lumbar FJIs (a needle is inserted into the facet-joint and steroid injected), by comparing it to a dummy or 'sham' procedure (a needle is inserted near the facet-joint but no therapeutic substance injected). Patients with persistent low back pain, referred to a community or hospital-based pain, spinal or musculoskeletal clinic by their general practitioner, will be reviewed and assessed by a specialist physician. They will be screened and recruited based on clinical history and examination. Participants will receive diagnostic injections (medial branch nerve blocks); those with a positive response will randomly receive either FJIs or a sham procedure, under x-ray guidance. All participants will receive a combined physical and psychological programme recommended by NICE as a strategy to reduce pain and its impact on the person's day-to-day life, even if the pain cannot be cured completely. Participants will be asked to complete questionnaires comparing a range of pain and disability-related issues. These will occur at baseline (before treatment) and at 6 weeks, 3 months and 6 months after their injections. Criteria for the study to be considered successful (and a definitive trial feasible) include the abilities to standardise the methods for injection and to recruit and retain sufficient participants, and the acceptability of the study design to participants and clinicians.
It remains unclear whether certain disadvantaged subgroups of society may be at heightened risk for poor chronic low back pain (cLBP) outcomes. The overall aim of this study is to incorporate a socioeconomic framework to characterize racial differences in cLBP severity and disability. Further, guided by the theory of fundamental causes, we aim to examine racial and socioeconomic status differences in biopsychosocial predictors of cLBP outcomes, particularly endogenous pain modulation.
Chronic low back pain is a major public health burden with only limited evidence of effectiveness for complementary and traditional therapies. Gua Sha is a traditional East Asian therapy traditionally used in the treatment of spinal pain. This study aimed to test the efficacy of Gua Sha therapy in patients with chronic low back pain A total of 50 patients with chronic low back pain were randomized to either two Gua Sha treatments (n=25) or a waitlist control group (n=25). Primary outcome measure was current pain intensity on a 100-mm visual analog scale; secondary outcome measures included back-related function (Oswestry Disability Index), movement-related pain (modified Pain on Movement Questionnaire), as well as pressure pain threshold, mechanical detection threshold, and vibration detection threshold.
Back pain is one of humanity most frequent complains. About nine of ten adults experience back pain at some points in their life and five out of ten working adults have back pain every year. When continued for long period it may constitute a disability which tries the patient of the most stoical individual as well as the doctor called to bring relief to the suffering victim. Kneading massage with topical analgesic is a common practice by physiotherapist especially in Nigeria in the management of low back pain, work has been done to know the efficacy of lofnac gel (topical analgesic) via phonophoresis in the management of low back pain(ojoawo,2015), but the comparison of the efficacy of kneading massage and phonophoresis in the management of low back pain has not been well documented. The purpose of this study therefore, is to compare the efficacy of kneading massage and phonophoresis using lofnac gel in the treatment of non-specific chronic low back pain.
This study aims at translating, cross culturally adapting and establishing the psychometric properties of the The Core Outcome Measure Index (COMI) for patients with low back pain (LBP) in Egypt. This study will be conducted at the outpatient clinic of public hospitals in Egypt. This study will be divided into two main stages: (1) Translation and cross culture adaptation, and (2) Validation. In the translation and cross culture adaptation stage, the original English version will be translated into modern Arabic following the guidelines described by Beaton et al. (2000). Then, the translated final version will be tested on a sample of 30-40 participants in a small pilot study to ensure linguistic clarity. For the validation stage, 100 male and female adults with LBP will be recruited from public physiotherapy outpatient clinics. Eligible patients will be asked to complete a questionnaire booklet containing The Arabic versions of Oswestry Disability index (ODI), Ronald Morris Disability Questionnaire (RMDQ), Short-form 36 (SF-36) and the Visual analogy scale (VAS). Further, disability and function will be assessed by Timed Up and Go test (TUG), 50 feet walking and loaded reach test. Outcome measures will include: 1. Face validity which will be evaluated subjectively based on judgment of expert committee and patients' feedback. 2. Concurrent validity is assessed by testing correlation between the COMI and VAS, ODI, RMDQ and SF-36 3. Construct validity will be assessed by testing the correlation between the scores for each item of the COMI and its corresponding valid back specific full-length questionnaire including the ODI, RMDQ, SF-36 and VAS. All testing procedure will be repeated after seven days for testing reliability.
The primary objective of this study is to compare the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of an individualized group based exercise and education program supported in the community to a control group of usual care in preventing back pain flare-ups and to mitigate the negative consequences of subsequent episodes if they occur.
Dr. Macedo and others involved in the proposed research recently conducted a study that investigated whether simple clinical characteristics could identify patients who benefit more from either motor control exercises or graded activity. Results were statistically significant and clinically relevant demonstrating that a simple questionnaire could help aid the selection of the most appropriate exercise therapy for each individual patient. Therefore, we aim to conduct a randomized controlled trial following a similar approach to the original study to validate in a different sample the results of the effect modification analysis.
Although it is known that chronic low back pain (CLBP) have a multifactorial etiology, the investigations about it are mostly specific to each investigation area, making difficult to understand this complex condition. The purpose of the study was to investigate CLBP from a multidisciplinary approach, analyzing biomechanical, morphological and inflammatory parameters aiming to compare the influence of two strength training protocols, one of low intensity and low volume (LIT) and one of high intensity and high volume (HIT). In both experiments, pain intensity and level of functional disability were analyzed (by analogue scale of pain and Oswestry Index), Ground Reaction Forces (GRF - AMTI BP600900 - 2000 force plate), kinematics of lower limbs (Inertial Sensors by Noraxon) and electromyography of the rectus abdominis, external oblique, lumbar multifidus, medial gluteus, vastus lateralis and biceps femoris muscles (TelemyoDTS) during gait and sit-to-stand, inflammatory cytokines by Multiplex in blood samples and cross-sectional area (CSA) of the lumbar multifidus by ultrasound imaging.
This study evaluates the analgesic effect of a combination treatment of exercise and mindfulness based meditation in patients with chronic back pain. Half of the participants will partake in a 4-week exercise and meditation intervention, while the other half will receive a placebo treatment. The investigators hypothesize that a combination treatment reduces disability and pain more than the control intervention.