In the past, it hasn’t been clear whether physical activity staves
off low back pain, or people without back pain are more likely to be
active, the researchers write in the British Journal of Sports
Medicine. To help determine which comes first, the review team
analyzed data from 36 studies that followed nearly 160,000 people
over time who didn’t have back pain at the start.
“Systematic reviews of clinical trials suggest that exercise reduces
low back pain intensity and its recurrence. In addition, the current
review suggests that exercise or other leisure time activity also
protects against developing chronic low back pain," lead author Dr.
Rhaman Shiri, a researcher with Finnish Institute of Occupational
Health in Helsinki, told Reuters Health by email.
To standardize definitions from the various studies, Shiri and a
colleague counted any non-work-related physical effort, including
walking and climbing stairs, as physical activity in addition to
sports or other forms of intentional exercise. People were
considered active if they engaged in such physical activity at least
once or twice a week for at least 30 to 60 minutes, or if they were
in the middle or high end of total physical activity within their
study group.
The researchers found that for moderately or highly active people,
the risk of developing chronic low back pain was 14 percent and 16
percent, respectively, lower compared with people in the
least-active category.
Chronic low back pain was defined as pain that lasts for three
months or more, or pain for more than 30 days within the previous 12
months.
For acute or occasional low back pain, however, physical activity
levels didn’t seem to make a difference in risk. The same was true
of hospitalizations or disability leave related to low back pain.
Limitations of the review, the authors note, include the fact that
some studies did not account for factors that might influence the
results, such as work-related physical exertion, depression or
smoking, all of which are associated with both lack of physical
activity and risk of low back pain.
There were also too few elderly or very young adults to determine
whether the apparent protective effect of physical activity is true
for all age groups. Older people are more likely to be inactive as a
result of back pain, for example, the authors point out.
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People are becoming more and more aware of the need for activity,
Dr. Joel Press told Reuters Health in a phone interview.
“We were meant to move. We were not meant to be stagnant in any way,
so I think this study does confirm that. It's a big study where they
looked at a lot of people,” said Press, who is physiatrist-in-chief
at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York.
Usually, Press tells people who already have back pain to cut down
on the sitting and increase movement with low-impact activities such
as walking.
“Generally lower impact, walking type things are probably the
starting point. Swimming is another low impact activity that puts
less load on your back, but you're still getting a lot of
cardiovascular fitness and movement with it,” said Press, who was
not involved in the current study.
It may be best to avoid starting out with sports that have a lot of
twisting and turning, such as golf, baseball and tennis unless you
take precautions to try not to get into a position where you're
going to make it worse, he noted.
“I think the biggest thing is, if you're doing an activity and every
time you're doing it the pain intensifies while you're doing the
activity, or even afterward, you're worse off than you were before,”
Press said.
“If somebody does an exercise and they're a little sore right
afterward, but by later that day they feel fine, and the next day
they're no worse, they feel fine, that's a green light - go ahead,
you're doing okay.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2sKHxxh British Journal of Sports Medicine,
online June 14, 2017.
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