Low back pain can lead to neuroplastic changes in the central nervous system, known as nociplastic pain. As nociplastic pain may be provoked by premorbid sensory profiles, such profiles may be prognostic in the development of nociplastic pain over time. To investigate whether four sensory profiles are prognostic in the development of symptoms of nociplastic pain in people with acute low back pain.Background
Objectives
A cornerstone in treating low back pain (LBP) is the provision of information to patients, and the internet is increasingly being used as a source of health information delivery. However, the effect of and satisfaction with online information have been questioned. To develop a multi-item instrument to measure an index score of satisfaction with online information for patients with LBP.Background
Purpose
Over the past decade, it has become apparent that more often than not musculoskeletal pain occurs in more than one site in an individual, and traditional approaches, where pain has been studied as a narrow site-specific problem, are often not feasible. The overall aim of this study is to describe clusters of pain using a large population-based sample. This presentation will focus specifically on musculoskeletal co-complaints in back pain sufferers. The Danish National Institute of Public Health has since 1987 conducted national representative health interview surveys of the adult Danish population some of which have included questions on musculoskeletal complaints. We used latent class analysis to identify latent classes of musculoskeletal complaints that occurred alongside a primary complaint of back pain. In addition, probabilities that specific sites occurred as co-complaints were determined. Three latent classes were identified and they exhibited quite different patterns of musculoskeletal co-complaints. The most commonly occurring class had a low probability of any co-complaints, the second most commonly occurring class had a high probability of pain in the neck, shoulders and mid-back, while the least commonly occurring class had very high probabilities of pain at all other body sites.Background and purpose
Methods and results
The musculoskeletal system is a common, but often overlooked, cause of chest pain. Little is known about the efficacy of spinal manipulation for this condition. The purpose of the present study is to evaluate the relative effectiveness of two conservative treatment approaches for acute musculoskeletal chest pain, 1) a spinal manipulation-based therapy as a typical example of chiropractic treatment and 2) self-management as an example of minimal intervention. In a non-blinded, randomised controlled trial set at an emergency cardiology department and four outpatient chiropractic clinics, 115 consecutive patients with acute chest pain and no clear medical diagnosis at initial presentation were included. After a baseline evaluation, patients with musculoskeletal chest pain were randomized to four weeks of chiropractic treatment or self-management, with post-treatment questionnaire follow-up four and 12 weeks later. Primary outcome measures were numeric change in pain intensity (11-point box numerical rating scale) and self-perceived change in pain (7-point ordinal scale). Secondary measures included Medical Outcomes Study Short Form 36 (SF-36) scores, change in pain intensity (chest, thoracic spine, neck and shoulder/arm), and self-perceived change in general health. Preliminary results will be available at the time of presentation.Background and purpose
Methods and results
A clinical diagnosis of Myofascial Pain Syndrome (MPS) requires manual palpation for the identification of at least one clinically relevant trigger point (TP). However, few comparable, high quality studies exist regarding the robustness of TP examination. Our aim was to determine the inter-observer agreement of TP examination among four examiners and whether reproducibility is influenced by examiner clinical experience. Two experienced and two inexperienced clinicians each performed a standardized palpation of the upper Trapezius musculature. Each observer was asked to judge the presents/absence of clinically relevant TP(s) using clinician global assessment (GA). A random case mix of 81 female participants was examined, 14 being asymptomatic and the remainder suffering from neck/shoulder pain. Examiners received psychomotor training and video analysis feedback provided prior to and during the study in order to improve protocol standardization. Kappa co-efficients were calculated for all possible examiner pairings. Good agreement was noted between the experienced pairing (κ= 0.63). Moderate levels of agreement were observed among the two mixed pairings (κ=0.35 and 0.47 respectively). However, poor agreement was observed for the inexperienced pairing (κ=0.22). Inter-observer agreement was not stable with the experienced pairing in particular, exhibiting a sharp decline in agreement during the latter portion of the study. Identification of clinically relevant TPs of the upper Trapezius musculature is a reproducible procedure when performed by two experienced clinicians. However, an experienced-inexperienced observer pairing can yield acceptable levels of agreement. A protracted period of data collection may be detrimental to inter-observer agreement.
Chronic pain and psychosocial distress are generally thought to be associated in chronic musculoskeletal disorders such as non-specific neck pain. However, it is unclear whether a raised level of anxiety is necessarily a feature of longstanding, intense pain amongst patient and general population sub-groups. Post-hoc analysis. In a cohort of 70 self-selected female, non-specific neck pain sufferers, we observed relatively high levels of self-reported pain of 4.46 (measured on the 11 point numerical pain rating scale (NRS-101)) and a longstanding duration of symptoms (156 days/year). However, the mean anxiety scores observed (5.49), fell well below the clinically relevant threshold of 21 required by the Beck Anxiety Inventory. The cohort was stratified to further distinguish individuals with higher pain intensity (NRS>6) and longer symptom duration (>90 days). Although a highly statistically significant difference (p=0.000) was subsequently observed with respect to pain intensity, in the resulting sub-groups, none such a difference was noted with respect to anxiety levels. Our results indicate that chronic, intense pain and anxiety do not always appear to be related. Explanations for these findings may include that anxiety is not triggered in socially functional individuals, that individual coping strategies have come into play or in some instances that a psychological disorder like alexithymia could be a confounder. More studies are needed to clarify the specific role of anxiety in chronic non-specific musculoskeletal pain before general evidence-driven clinical extrapolations can be made.
To develop disease-specific quality indicators for patients with low-back-pain presenting to Danish chiropractic clinics. A cross-disciplinary group of healthcare providers (the indicatorgroup) prioritized nine evidensbased indicators and standards in a systematic consensus process. A pilot test including 206 low-back-pain patients was carried out in eight chiropractic clinics. An audit meeting with the test-clinics was conducted after the test-period, and the indicatorgroup designed the final set of indicators. The indicator domains were: Anamnesis, test for discogenic back pain, neurology, radiology, classification, exercise therapy, outcome assessment (process and result) and re-evaluation. Two indicators: outcome assessment as a process-indicator (standard ≥ 95 %, standard reached (95% CI): 95.8 % (91.6 – 98.3)) and outcome assessment as a result-indicator (standard ≥ 50 %, standard reached: 67.7 % (59.9 – 74.8)) met the standards set by the indicatorgroup. After evaluating the test-results the indicatorgroup decided to maintain all nine indicators, however, lowering the standards on anamnesis, discogenic back pain and classification.Purposes
Methods and results
The prevalence of back pain has remained relatively constant in the population in spite of previous interventions. Persons with sub-acute back pain are assumed to benefit from extended multidisciplinary, interdisciplinary or transdiciplinary and multisectorial, intersectorial or trans-sectorial interventions as an alternative to traditional mono-professional interventions. The purpose of this health technology assessment (HTA) was to document the possible effect of such interventions in patients suffering from back pain of 4-12 weeks duration. A systematic literature review is the overall basis for this HTA and the analysis of the interventions in relation to technology, patients, organization, and economics. HTA reports, systematic reviews, and recent primary studies were included. Further, primary data from Danish institutions (public and private) with experience in working with this technology were collected. There is moderate evidence that early multidiciplnary, interdisciplinary and transdiciplinary interventions are more effective than monodiciplinary interventions or no interventions in primary care. The effects are mainly seen in relation to reduced sick leave at or beyond 12-months follow-up and not in relation to reduced pain or improved function. The interventions appear to be cost-effective. Danish back centers mainly use sequential and/or parallel collaborative models.Background and purpose
Methods and results
The musculoskeletal system is recognized as a possible source of pain in patients with chest pain. The objectives of the present study were (1) to investigate the interobserver reliability of an overall diagnosis of musculoskeletal chest pain using a standardized examination protocol in a cohort of patients with chest pain suspected to be of non-cardiac origin, (2) to investigate the interobserver reliability of the single components of the protocol, and finally, (3) to investigate the importance of clinical experience on the level of interobserver reliability. Eighty patients with acute chest pain were recruited from a cardiology department. Four observers (two chiropractors and two chiropractic students) performed a physical examination and an extended manual examination of the spine and chest wall. Percentage agreement, Cohen's Kappa and ICC were calculated for observer pairs and overall. Musculoskeletal chest pain was diagnosed in 44.0 % of patients. Interobserver kappa values were substantial for the chiropractors and overall, and moderate for the students. For single items of the protocol, both pairs showed fair to substantial agreement regarding pain provocation tests and poor to fair agreement regarding spinal segmental dysfunction tests.Background and purpose
Methods and results