Articles: back-pain.
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Review
1987 Volvo award in clinical sciences. A new clinical model for the treatment of low-back pain.
Because there is increasing concern about low-back disability and its current medical management, this analysis attempts to construct a new theoretic framework for treatment. Observations of natural history and epidemiology suggest that low-back pain should be a benign, self-limiting condition, that low back-disability as opposed to pain is a relatively recent Western epidemic, and that the role of medicine in that epidemic must be critically examined. The traditional medical model of disease is contrasted with a biopsychosocial model of illness to analyze success and failure in low-back disorders. ⋯ We must distinguish pain as a purely the symptoms and signs of distress and illness behavior from those of physical disease, and nominal from substantive diagnoses. Management must change from a negative philosophy of rest for pain to more active restoration of function. Only a new model and understanding of illness by physicians and patients alike makes real change possible.
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Social science & medicine · Jan 1987
ReviewPsychological research and chronic low back pain: a stand-still or breakthrough?
Some of the main psychological research topics concerning chronic low back pain (CLBP) are critically discussed. These topics include: 1. research aimed at describing a specific low back pain personality profile, 2. research into the predictability of therapy results on the basis of psychological assessment, and 3. outcome research of psychologically-oriented treatment for CLBP. It is concluded that these topics provide little insight into the role of psychological factors in the development and maintenance of CLBP. ⋯ Discussed are: 1. Risk factors in the transition from acute to chronic LBP, 2. the deviant sensitivity to acute, experimental pain stimuli of CLBP patients, 3. the relationship between CLBP behavior and psychophysiologic variables, 4. determinants of CLBP behavior, with special attention to endurance, 5. the deviant processing of proprioceptive stimuli, and 6. the implementation for chronic pain of the unpredictability and uncontrollability paradigms. The emphasis in the presentation of these new topics is more on raising questions than on answering them.
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Review Clinical Trial
Epidural steroid injections for low back pain and lumbosacral radiculopathy.
Non-surgical treatments of back pain may have prolonged and lasting benefit. Epidural steroid injections is one of the non-operative managements of back pain. These injections are recommended in patients with signs and symptoms of nerve root irritation. ⋯ The depression of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis lasts 3 weeks. While complications have been reported, these are rare. Intrathecal steroid injection is not advisable since polyethylene glycol, the vehicle used in depot steroid preparations, may cause arachnoiditis.
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Med. Clin. North Am. · Nov 1984
ReviewThe low back pain syndrome. Diagnostic impact of high-resolution computed tomography.
This article focuses on low back pain which is directly related to the spinal axis and its supporting structures (spondylogenic back pain). This type of back pain is particularly prominent in our society, is frequently managed surgically, and has benefited from most advanced diagnostic imaging with computed tomography.