» Articles » PMID: 35959703

From Protection to Non-protection: A Mixed Methods Study Investigating Movement, Posture and Recovery from Disabling Low Back Pain

Overview
Journal Eur J Pain
Publisher Wiley
Date 2022 Aug 12
PMID 35959703
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: Movement and posture are commonly believed to relate to low back pain (LBP). Yet, we know little about how people make sense of the relationship between their LBP, movement and posture, particularly after recovery. We aimed to qualitatively explore this understanding, how it changes and how it relates to quantitative changes.

Methods: A mixed method study in the context of an existing single-case design involving 12 people with disabling non-specific LBP. Interviews were conducted before and after a 12-week physiotherapy-led Cognitive Functional Therapy intervention, and qualitative findings from these were integrated with individualized, quantitative measures of movement, posture, psychological factors, pain and activity limitation.

Results: Strong beliefs about movement and posture were identified during the baseline interviews. Lived experiences of tension and stiffness characterized the embodiment of 'nonconscious protection', while healthcare and societal messages prompted pain-related fear and 'conscious protection'. Through varied journeys, most participants reported improvements over time with less protective movement and postural strategies. For some, being less protective required focused attention ('conscious non-protection'), but most returned to automatic, normal and fearless patterns ('nonconscious non-protection'), forgetting about their LBP. One participant reported no meaningful shift, remaining protective. Greater spinal range, faster movement, more relaxed postures and less back muscle EMG accompanied positive changes in self-report factors.

Conclusion: The findings offer a framework for understanding how people make sense of movement and posture during the process of recovery from persistent, disabling non-specific LBP. This involved a re-conceptualisation of movement and posture, from threatening, to therapeutic.

Significance: Findings from qualitative interviews before and after a Cognitive Functional Therapy intervention in 12 people with disabling low back pain highlighted an individualized recovery journey from conscious and nonconscious protection to conscious non-protection for some, and nonconscious non-protection for many. Pre and post-quantitative measures of movement, posture, psychological factors, pain and activity limitation integrated well with the qualitative findings. The findings suggest movement and posture may form part of a multidimensional pain schema.

Citing Articles

Central mechanisms of muscle tone regulation: implications for pain and performance.

Cacciatore T, Anderson D, Cohen R Front Neurosci. 2024; 18:1511783.

PMID: 39717699 PMC: 11665217. DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2024.1511783.


Distinction of non-specific low back pain patients with proprioceptive disorders from healthy individuals by linear discriminant analysis.

Shokouhyan S, Davoudi M, Hoviattalab M, Abedi M, Bervis S, Parnianpour M Front Bioeng Biotechnol. 2022; 10:1078805.

PMID: 36582840 PMC: 9792676. DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2022.1078805.


From protection to non-protection: A mixed methods study investigating movement, posture and recovery from disabling low back pain.

Wernli K, Smith A, Coll F, Campbell A, Kent P, OSullivan P Eur J Pain. 2022; 26(10):2097-2119.

PMID: 35959703 PMC: 9826080. DOI: 10.1002/ejp.2022.

References
1.
Caneiro J, OSullivan P, Lipp O, Mitchinson L, Oeveraas N, Bhalvani P . Evaluation of implicit associations between back posture and safety of bending and lifting in people without pain. Scand J Pain. 2018; 18(4):719-728. DOI: 10.1515/sjpain-2018-0056. View

2.
Swinkels-Meewisse E, Swinkels R, Verbeek A, Vlaeyen J, Oostendorp R . Psychometric properties of the Tampa Scale for kinesiophobia and the fear-avoidance beliefs questionnaire in acute low back pain. Man Ther. 2003; 8(1):29-36. DOI: 10.1054/math.2002.0484. View

3.
Knechtle D, Schmid S, Suter M, Riner F, Moschini G, Senteler M . Fear-avoidance beliefs are associated with reduced lumbar spine flexion during object lifting in pain-free adults. Pain. 2020; 162(6):1621-1631. PMC: 8120682. DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000002170. View

4.
Nicholas M . The pain self-efficacy questionnaire: Taking pain into account. Eur J Pain. 2006; 11(2):153-63. DOI: 10.1016/j.ejpain.2005.12.008. View

5.
Vibe Fersum K, OSullivan P, Skouen J, Smith A, Kvale A . Efficacy of classification-based cognitive functional therapy in patients with non-specific chronic low back pain: a randomized controlled trial. Eur J Pain. 2012; 17(6):916-28. PMC: 3796866. DOI: 10.1002/j.1532-2149.2012.00252.x. View