Lehmann T R, Spratt K F, Lehmann K K
Louisville Orthopedic Clinic and Sports Rehabilitation Center, Kentucky.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 1993 Jun 15;18(8):1103-12. doi: 10.1097/00007632-199306150-00023.
Low back pain (LBP) is the most common, costly, and disabling musculoskeletal condition. Although most LBP patients recover within two months, 2-3% eventually develop disabling chronic low back pain (DCLBP). Due to the prevalence of DCLBP problems, models have been developed to predict which acute low back pain patients are predisposed to the problems associated with this condition. Many see the development of these models as a first step that must be taken before useful approaches for containing and reducing the problem can be conceptualized, implemented, and tested. A recent publication by Cats-Baril and Frymoyer considered this specific problem. While the results of their study indicate considerable success in predicting DCLBP patients, the high prediction rates they obtained may be spurious because of the characteristics of their sampled patient population in conjunction with some of the predictors they found useful in identifying DCLBP patients. The purpose of the present study was to focus on the crucial patient population (i.e., acute LBP patients who perceive their problem as work-related and who have been unable to work for more than two but less than six weeks), and evaluate the ability of various personal, medical, occupational, and psychological factors to predict predisposition to DCLBP. Fifty-five patients referred by occupational physicians were evaluated and followed successfully for at least 6 months. Patients in the study were given a physical examination that included Spratt et al's assessment of pain behavior. They were then asked to fill out an extensive battery of self-report questionnaires, addressing issues associated with personal demographics, health history, work requirements, job satisfaction, injury information, and pain/function factors. At the 6-month follow-up, a structured telephone interview was used to obtain outcome information regarding patient status, including ability to return to work and general outcomes of treatment. Average patient age was 37.2 years (range, 22-57) and 67% of the patients were male. On average, patients had been unable to work for approximately 4 weeks when initially surveyed. Overall, 12.7% of the patients returned to work within 1 month of injury, 40% returned within 2 months, 54.5% within 3 months, 69% within 4 months, 74.5% within 5 months, 76.3% within 6 months, 80% within 7 months, and 83.6% after 7 months. Approximately 16% never successfully returned to work within the follow-up period of this study. DCLBP was found to be correlated only with marital status, as married patients returned to work more quickly than single patients (P < 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
腰痛(LBP)是最常见、代价最高且使人致残的肌肉骨骼疾病。尽管大多数腰痛患者在两个月内康复,但2% - 3%最终会发展为致残性慢性腰痛(DCLBP)。由于DCLBP问题普遍存在,已开发出模型来预测哪些急性腰痛患者易患与此病症相关的问题。许多人认为这些模型的开发是在构思、实施和测试控制及减少该问题的有效方法之前必须迈出的第一步。Cats - Baril和Frymoyer最近发表的一篇文章探讨了这个具体问题。虽然他们的研究结果表明在预测DCLBP患者方面取得了相当大的成功,但由于他们所抽样的患者群体特征以及他们发现的一些有助于识别DCLBP患者的预测因素,他们获得的高预测率可能是虚假的。本研究的目的是聚焦关键患者群体(即那些认为自己的问题与工作相关且已无法工作超过两周但少于六周的急性腰痛患者),并评估各种个人、医学、职业和心理因素预测DCLBP易感性的能力。对职业医生转诊的55名患者进行了评估,并成功随访至少6个月。研究中的患者接受了体格检查,包括Spratt等人对疼痛行为的评估。然后要求他们填写一系列详尽的自我报告问卷,涉及个人人口统计学、健康史、工作要求、工作满意度、受伤信息以及疼痛/功能因素等问题。在6个月的随访中,通过结构化电话访谈获取有关患者状况的结果信息,包括重返工作岗位的能力和治疗的总体结果。患者平均年龄为37.2岁(范围22 - 57岁),67%的患者为男性。最初调查时,患者平均已无法工作约4周。总体而言,12.7%的患者在受伤后1个月内重返工作岗位,40%在2个月内重返,54.5%在3个月内重返,69%在4个月内重返,74.5%在5个月内重返,76.3%在6个月内重返,80%在7个月内重返,7个月后为83.6%。在本研究的随访期内,约16%的患者从未成功重返工作岗位。发现DCLBP仅与婚姻状况相关,因为已婚患者比单身患者重返工作岗位的速度更快(P < 0.01)。(摘要截选至400字)