Division of Orthopaedic Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Spine J. 2010 Jun;10(6):554-66. doi: 10.1016/j.spinee.2010.03.033.
Low back pain (LBP) is a disorder that commonly affects the working population, resulting in disability, health-care utilization, and a heavy socioeconomic burden. Although the etiology of LBP remains uncertain, occupational activities have been implicated. Evaluating these potentially causal relationships requires a methodologically rigorous approach. Occupational repetitive and/or heavy lifting is widely thought to be a risk factor for the development of LBP.
To conduct a systematic review of the scientific literature to evaluate the causal relationship between occupational lifting and LBP.
Systematic review of the literature.
Studies reporting an association between occupational lifting and LBP.
Numerical association between different levels of exposure to occupational lifting and the presence or severity of LBP.
A search was conducted using Medline, EMBASE, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, OSH-ROM, gray literature (eg, reports not published in scientific journals), hand-searching occupational health journals, reference lists of included studies, and content experts. Evaluation of study quality was performed using a modified version of the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. Levels of evidence were evaluated for specific Bradford-Hill criteria (association, dose-response, temporality, experiment, and biological plausibility).
This search yielded 2,766 citations, of which 35 studies met eligibility criteria and 9 were considered high methodological quality studies, including four case-controls and five prospective cohorts. Among the high-quality studies, there was conflicting evidence for association with four studies reporting significant associations and five studies reporting nonsignificant results. Two of the three studies that assessed dose-response demonstrated a nonsignificant trend. There were no significant risk estimates that demonstrated temporality. No studies were identified that satisfied the experiment criterion. Subgroup analyses identified certain types of lifting and LBP that had statistically significant results, but there were none that satisfied more than two of the Bradford-Hill criteria.
This review uncovered several high-quality studies examining a relationship between occupational lifting and LBP, but these studies did not consistently support any of the Bradford-Hill criteria for causality. There was moderate evidence of an association for specific types of lifting and LBP. Based on these results, it is unlikely that occupational lifting is independently causative of LBP in the populations of workers studied. Further research in specific subcategories of lifting would further clarify the presence or absence of a causal relationship.
腰痛(LBP)是一种常见的职业病,会导致工作人群残疾、医疗保健利用增加和沉重的社会经济负担。尽管腰痛的病因仍不确定,但职业活动已被牵连。评估这些潜在的因果关系需要一种方法严谨的方法。人们普遍认为,职业重复性和/或繁重的举重是导致腰痛发展的危险因素。
对科学文献进行系统回顾,以评估职业举重与腰痛之间的因果关系。
文献系统综述。
报告职业举重与腰痛之间存在关联的研究。
不同水平的职业举重暴露与腰痛的存在或严重程度之间的数值关联。
使用 Medline、EMBASE、CINAHL、Cochrane 图书馆、OSH-ROM、灰色文献(例如,未在科学期刊上发表的报告)、职业健康期刊的手工搜索、纳入研究的参考文献和内容专家进行搜索。使用纽卡斯尔-渥太华量表的修改版本对研究质量进行评估。根据特定的布拉德福德-希尔标准(关联、剂量反应、时间性、实验和生物学合理性)评估证据水平。
本次搜索产生了 2766 条引文,其中 35 项研究符合入选标准,9 项被认为是高质量的研究,包括 4 项病例对照研究和 5 项前瞻性队列研究。在高质量研究中,有 4 项研究报告了显著关联,5 项研究报告了无显著结果,因此对关联的证据存在争议。评估剂量反应的三项研究中有两项没有显示出显著趋势。没有发现具有显著时间性的风险估计。没有确定满足实验标准的研究。亚组分析确定了某些类型的举重和腰痛具有统计学意义的结果,但没有一个符合超过两个布拉德福德-希尔标准。
本综述发现了几项高质量的研究,这些研究检查了职业举重与腰痛之间的关系,但这些研究并没有一致支持任何一个布拉德福德-希尔因果标准。对于特定类型的举重和腰痛,有中度证据表明存在关联。根据这些结果,职业举重不太可能独立导致研究人群中的腰痛。对特定类别的举重进行进一步研究将进一步阐明因果关系的存在或不存在。