CE/CME

Low Back Pain: Evidence-based Diagnosis and Treatment

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TREATMENT
The prognosis of simple acute mechanical LBP is excellent. Although back pain is a leading reason for visiting health care providers, many affected individuals never seek medical care and apparently improve on their own. In a random telephone survey of North Carolina residents, only 39% of persons with LBP sought medical care.24 Therefore, patients who do seek treatment should be given reassurance, and therapies should be tailored to the individual in the least invasive and most cost-effective manner. Many treatment options are available for LBP, but often strong evidence of benefit is lacking.

Pharmacologic therapy
Anti-inflammatories. It can be assumed that when a patient comes to the practitioner for evaluation of LBP, there is an expectation that some type of medication will be recommended or prescribed for pain relief. Unless there is a contraindication, NSAIDs are often first-line therapy, and they are effective for short-term symptom relief when compared with placebo.25 A mild pain medication, such as acetaminophen, is also a common treatment. The 2007 joint practice guideline from the American Pain Society (APS) and the American College of Physicians (ACP) recommends acetaminophen or NSAIDs as first-line therapy for acute LBP.3 Neither agent—NSAIDs or acetaminophen—has shown superiority, and combining the two has shown no additional benefits.26 Caution must be used, however, as NSAIDs have a risk for gastrointestinal toxicity and nephrotoxicity, and acetaminophen has a dose- and patient-dependent risk for hepatotoxicity.

Muscle relaxants. Muscle relaxants are another pharmacologic treatment option for LBP. Most pain reduction from this class of medication occurs in the first one to two weeks of therapy, although benefit may continue for up to four weeks.27 There is also evidence that a combination of an NSAID and a muscle relaxer has added benefits.27 These medications are centrally acting, so sedation and dizziness are common; all medications in this class have these adverse effects to some degree. Carisoprodol has as its first metabolite meprobamate, which is a tranquilizer used to treat anxiety disorders; it has a potential for abuse and should be used with caution in certain populations.

Opioids. Opioids are commonly prescribed to patients with LBP, though there are limited data regarding efficacy. One trial compared an NSAID alone versus an NSAID plus oxycodone/acetaminophen and found no significant difference in pain or disability after seven days.28 In addition, the adverse effects of opioids, which include sedation, constipation, nausea, and confusion, may be amplified in the elderly population; therefore, opioids should be prescribed with caution in these patients. If prescribed to treat acute LBP, opioids should be used in short, scheduled dosing regimens since NSAIDs or acetaminophen suffice for most patients.

Corticosteroids. Oral glucocorticoids are sometimes given to patients with acute LBP, and they likely are used more frequently in patients with radicular symptoms. However, the APS/ACP 2007 joint guidelines recommend against use of systemic glucocorticoids for acute LBP due to lack of proven benefit.3 Epidural steroid injections are not generally beneficial for isolated acute LBP, but there is evidence that they are helpful with persistent radicular pain.29 Zarghooni and colleagues found significant reductions in pain and use of pain medication after single-shot epidural injections.29

Other pharmacologic therapies, acupuncture, sclerotherapy, and other methods are used to treat back pain, but these are typically reserved for chronic, not acute, LBP.

Nonpharmacologic therapy
Physical therapy. Physical therapy is a commonly prescribed treatment for LBP. Systematic literature reviews indicate that for patients with acute LBP (< 6 wk), there is no difference in the effectiveness of exercise therapy compared to no treatment and care provided by a general practitioner or to manipulations.30 For patients with subacute (6-12 wk) and chronic (≥ 12 wk) LBP, exercise therapy is effective compared to no treatment.30 There is debate, however, over which exercise activities should be used. Research supports strength/resistance and coordination/stabilization exercises.

Most therapists recommend the McKenzie method or spine stabilization exercises.31 The McKenzie method is used for LBP with sciatica; the patient moves through exercises within the prone position and focuses on extension of the spine. Spine stabilization is an active form of exercise based on a “neutral spine” position and helps strengthen muscles to maintain this position (core stabilization). The Mc­Kenzie method, when added to first-line care for LBP, does not produce significant improvements in pain or other clinical outcomes, although it may reduce health care utilization.32 Spine stabilization exercises have been shown to decrease pain, disability, and risk for recurrence after a first episode of back pain.33 The apparent success of physical therapy is attributed to compliance with directed home exercise programs, which have been shown to reduce the rate of recurrence, decrease episodes of acute LBP, and decrease the need for health services.34

Spinal traction. Traction or nonsurgical spinal decompression has emerged as a treatment for LBP. Unfortunately, there are little data to support its use as a treatment for acute LBP. Only a few randomized trials showed benefit, and these were small studies with a high risk for bias. A Cochrane review published in 2013 looked at 32 studies involving 2,762 patients with acute, subacute, and chronic LBP.35 The review did not find any evidence that traction alone or in combination with other therapy was any better than placebo treatment.35

Spinal manipulation. Spinal manipulation may be more effective than placebo treatment in reducing pain when the pain has been present for less than six weeks, but it is not more effective in reducing disability.36 There is little or no high-level evidence about spinal manipulation for acute LBP. However, there is some evidence of cost-effectiveness when using spinal manipulation in subacute to chronic pain.37 Chiropractic techniques are considered safe (when performed by a trained provider), but a systematic review found that these techniques provide no clinically relevant improvement in pain or disability when compared to other treatments.38

Bed rest. Bed rest has not been shown to improve outcomes, and in fact patients who had bed rest had less favorable outcomes than those who stayed active.39 Bed rest is less effective at reducing pain and improving function when compared to staying active.39

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