AI Article Synopsis

  • Low back pain is a frequent issue for physical therapists, often starting early in their careers or during their studies.
  • Researchers studied if hip and lumbopelvic control and endurance could predict transient low back pain during a standing task, involving 72 physical therapy students to analyze their performance on various tests.
  • The study found that a combination of specific hip and leg tests could accurately identify students likely to experience transient back pain, with a classification accuracy of 72.2%, sensitivity of 63%, and specificity of 77.8%.

Article Abstract

Low back pain among physical therapists is a common musculoskeletal disorder that first occurs early in their career or as a student. This observational prospective study assessed the ability of hip and lumbopelvic neuromuscular control, endurance and hip range of motion tests to predict the development of transient low back pain development during a standing task. Seventy-two physical therapy students without low back pain completed nine performance tests and a 2-hour standing test on two separate days. Participants were classified as transient pain developers (PD) if they reported a ≥ 10mm increase in low back pain on a visual analog scale. Transient back pain was reported by 37.5% of students during the standing test. A cluster of three positive tests, self-rated active hip abduction (somewhat difficult or more), bilateral total hip internal rotation greater than 81 degrees, and non-dominant limb single-leg squat (moderate deviations), demonstrated an increased probability (94.9%) of identifying PDs. Negative findings on the same three tests decreased the probability to 10.7%. Overall, the classification accuracy for the three-test model was 72.2%. The sensitivity for the model was 63% and the specificity was 77.8%.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00140139.2024.2323998DOI Listing

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