Abstract
BACKGROUND:
The reason that participants develop pain episodes during the Sorensen test remains unclear. Lumbar lordosis and trunk muscle are important for dynamic stability of the spine; however, their role in pain episodes during the Sorensen test has not yet been discussed.
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the effects of muscular morphology and lumbar curvature on pain development during the Sorensen test in patients with non-specific low back pain (LBP).
METHODS:
Ninety-one patients diagnosed with chronic non-specific LBP and underwent the Sorensen test were enrolled. Lumbar lordosis, cross-sectional area and fat infiltration rate of trunk muscle and centroid line of psoas major (dividing into three types: anterior arc, linear and posterior arc) were measured using ImageJ software. All recruited patients were grouped into pain episode and exhaustion groups and were matched for the confounders based on propensity scores. The above parameters were compared between groups and further adjusted for confounding bias.
RESULTS:
After adjustment , the mean differences in lumbar lordosis of 12.1
CONCLUSIONS:
Lower lumbar lordosis and linear and posterior arc types of the psoas major centroid line were possibly relevant to the pain episode during Sorensen test in patients with chronic non-specific LBP.
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