Acute low back pain: Systematic review of its prognosis

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Abstract

Objectives: To describe the course of acute low back pain and sciatica and to identify clinically important prognostic factors for these conditions. Design: Systematic review. Data sources: Searches of Medline, Embase, Cinahl, and Science Citation Index, and iterative searches of bibliographies. Main outcome measures: Pain, disability, and return to work. Results: 15 studies of variable methodological quality were included. Rapid improvements in pain (mean reduction 58% of initial scores), disability (58%), and return to work (82% of those initially off work) occurred in one month. Further improvement was apparent until about three months. Thereafter levels for pain, disability, and return to work remained almost constant. 73% of patients had at least one recurrence within 12 months. Conclusions: People with acute low back pain and associated disability usually improve rapidly within weeks. None the less, pain and disability are typically ongoing, and recurrences are common.

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Pengel, L. H. M., Herbert, R. D., Maher, C. G., & Refshauge, K. M. (2003, August 9). Acute low back pain: Systematic review of its prognosis. British Medical Journal. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.327.7410.323

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