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Relative contributions of the nervous system, spinal tissue and psychosocial health to non-specific low back pain: Multivariate meta-analysis

Authors :
Daniel L. Belavy
Bernadette M. Fitzgibbon
Clint T. Miller
Scott D. Tagliaferri
Patrick J. Owen
Sin-Ki Ng
Steven J. Bowe
Source :
European journal of pain (London, England)REFERENCES. 26(3)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Nervous system, psychosocial and spinal tissue biomarkers are associated with non-specific low back pain (nsLBP), though relative contributions are unclear. DATABASES AND DATA TREATMENT MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycINFO and SPORTDiscus were searched up to 25 March 2020. Related reviews and reference lists were also screened. Observational studies examining structural and functional nervous system biomarkers (e.g. quantitative sensory tests, structural and functional brain measures), psychosocial factors (e.g. mental health, catastrophizing) and structural spinal imaging biomarkers (e.g. intervertebral disc degeneration, paraspinal muscle size) between nsLBP and pain-free controls were included. For multivariate meta-analysis, two of three domains were required in each study. Random-effects pairwise and multivariate meta-analyses were performed. GRADE approach assessed evidence certainty. Newcastle-Ottawa scale assessed risk of bias. Main outcomes were the effect size difference of domains between nsLBP and pain-free controls. RESULTS Of 4519 unique records identified, 33 studies (LBP = 1552, referents = 1322) were meta-analysed. Psychosocial state (Hedges' g [95%CI]: 0.90 [0.69-1.10], p

Details

ISSN :
15322149
Volume :
26
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European journal of pain (London, England)REFERENCES
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....36f2c7f6ac8fe9057b41e69df495a9b8