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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 91-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 282 - 282
1 May 2009
Lahtinen-Suopanki T Niemistö L Koho P
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Dysfunction of the pelvic girdle causes alteration of the lumbopelvic muscle supporting function and thus disruption of the load transference through the pelvis.

Walking loads symmetrically the muscles that provide stability to the pelvis for load transference and is an easy way to evaluate bilateral muscle function.

The aim of this study was to find out if mobilisation of the symptomatic sacroiliac joint (SIJ) in chronic low back pain patients could alter the lumbopelvic muscle activity measured by surface EMG (sEMG) on the symptomatic side during walking.

The resulting change in the muscle activity seemed to be relaxation of the muscles evaluated.

The muscles whose activity changed for the most during walking after mobilization of the symptomatic SIJ were biceps femoris, on the right side 17,8% (p= 0.007) and on the left side 12.8% (p= 0.012). The right gluteus medius relaxed 14.4% (p=0.016) and left side 6.1% (p=0.033). Lumbar multifidi reacted more on the right side 14.5% (p=0.003) and on the left the decrease was 8.3% (p=0.021). Oblique abdominal externus muscles showed very little change after intervention.

This study gives us the point of view that the main influence the mobilisation has on SIJ is neurophysiological, reflectoric on muscle tone.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 488 - 489
1 Aug 2008
Niemistö L
Full Access

The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness, as well as cost-effectiveness, of combined manipulative therapy, stabilizing exercises, specialist consultation, and patient education (combination treatment) compared with that from specialist consultation and patient education alone (consultation) for chronic low back pain (CLBP). Secondary objectives were to examine the predictive factors for one-year unfavorable outcome of CLBP and psychosocial differences as determinants for recovery from CLBP following the combination treatment or specialist consultation alone. Additionally, the aim was to assess the changes in physical activity between groups at one year and changes in functional variables between the groups at five months.

Of 204 CLBP patients, 102 were randomized to a combination group and 102 to a consultation-alone group. All patients were clinically examined, informed about back pain, and encouraged to stay active and exercise according to specific instructions based on clinical evaluation. Treatment in the combination group included four sessions both of manipulative therapy and of stabilizing exercises aimed at correcting motor control of the trunk. Subjective pain, disability, health-related quality of life, physical activity, coping strategies, satisfaction with care, days of sick leave, consumption of health services, and costs were assessed by several questionnaires. For predictive analysis of treatment outcome, sociodemographic characteristics, work ability, and psychological variables were evaluated and functional assessments performed.

Significant improvement occurred in both groups on every self-rated outcome measurement. Within two years, the combination group showed only slightly more significant reduction on the Visual analogue scale (VAS) and clearly greater patient satisfaction than in the consultation group. Specialist consultation alone was more cost-effective in view of both health care use and work absenteeism, and led to an increase in health-related quality of life equal to that from the combination treatment. Patients in the consultation group also tended to increase their intensity of physical exercise, other activities, and their active time more than did those in the combination group.

Psychometric factors, longer previous sick-leave days, and a low to moderate level of pain intensity proved strongly to predict unfavorable treatment outcome. The Multidimensional Pain Inventory (MPI) was used to identify three patient subgroups to determine treatment outcome. These subgroups were active copers (AC), interpersonally distressed (ID), and dysfunctional (DYS) patients. They were distinguished by level of pain severity, affective distress, life control, and of activity. In this study, MPI patient profile clustering determined the slightly greater effectiveness of the combination therapy than of the consultation alone. The effectiveness of combination therapy was due to the large changes among the dysfunctional (DYS) patients, who gained an extra advantage from combination therapy both in perceived disability (ODI) and pain intensity (VAS). The advantage for ODI disappeared at the two-year follow-up due to the improving trend among the DYS patients in the consultation group. The advantage for pain intensity remained throughout the follow-up. For the AC and ID patients, the consultation alone was as effective as the combination treatment.

Both the specialist consultation group and the combination treatment group showed unexpectedly good improvement regarding pain, disability, and health-related quality of life. The combination treatment including manipulative therapy, stabilizing exercises, and specialist consultation did not clearly enhance the effect gained by the specialist consultation alone. A subgroup of dysfunctional patients appeared, however, to be more sensitive to the combination treatment, needing more repetition and fortification of the information with hands-on therapy and exercises.