Low Back Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Underlying Mechanism of Spinal Manipulative Therapy and the Effect of Pain on Physical Outcome Measures
The purpose of this study is to compare changes in spinal stiffness and back muscle activity between spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) responders, non-responders and asymptomatic participants. Additionally, the investigators wanted to compare the amount of lumbar degeneration between SMT responders, non-responders and asymptomatic participants. This study also determines if the presence of pain modifies post-SMT spinal stiffness and back muscle activity.
SMT is a common manual therapy for treating patients with mechanical low back pain (LBP).
SMT is defined as a high velocity, low amplitude thrust technique. Specifically, the
clinician stands beside a supine patient. The patient is passively side-bent towards the
side to be manipulated. The clinician passively rotates the patient and then delivers a high
velocity, low amplitude thrust to the anterior superior iliac spine in a posteroinferior
direction. SMT is indicated for patients with LBP judged to have spinal hypomobility or
malalignment. Recently, our collaborators have discovered that LBP subjects who benefit from
SMT can be identified prior to treatment by a five-item clinical prediction rule. Compared
to non-responders, those who respond to SMT have: 1) more than 30% decrease in the modified
Oswestry Disability Index score, 2) a significant and immediate decrease in spinal
stiffness, and 3) a concurrent change in lumbar multifidus muscle activity. Taken together,
the physical changes experienced by SMT responders alone provide an unique opportunity to
better understand the mechanisms underlying SMT.
Since spinal stiffness is an important physical indicator of SMT response, it is important
to understand the causal relation between pain, paraspinal/trunk muscle activity and spinal
stiffness. Although research has shown positive correlation between pain and muscle
activity, and between paraspinal muscle activity and spinal stiffness, the causal relation
between pain, paraspinal/trunk muscle activity and spinal stiffness remains unknown. Given
this background, an induction of temporary benign experimental pain to asymptomatic
individuals can help clarify such causal relation and improve our understanding of physical
responses in responders following pain resolution by SMT.
;
Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Caregiver, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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