The effect of exercise on percentile rank aerobic capacity, pain, and self-rated disability in patients with chronic low-back pain: A retrospective chart review
G. Van Der Velde et D. Mierau, The effect of exercise on percentile rank aerobic capacity, pain, and self-rated disability in patients with chronic low-back pain: A retrospective chart review, ARCH PHYS M, 81(11), 2000, pp. 1457-1463
Objective: To determine the effect of 6 weeks of exercise on aerobic capaci
ty and on measures of pain and disability in patients with chronic low-back
pain (LBP).
Design: Retrospective chart survey.
Setting: A fitness facility in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
Patients: Patients with chronic LBP with an average duration of pain of 10
months.
Interventions: Six-week exercise program to improve aerobic capacity, muscu
lar endurance, and flexibility.
Main Outcome Measures: Data were collected from 258 charts of patients with
chronic LBP treated from 1991 to 1994, including age, sex, and aerobic cap
acity. Patients completed the numeric ratings scale-101 (pain scale) and Os
westry LBP disability questionnaire. Pre- and postexercise data were compar
ed for patients with LBP who completed the exercise prescription. Comparati
ve data from the same time period were also collected from the records of i
ndividuals not treated for chronic pain (controls) and who had volunteered
for a test of general fitness at the same facility.
Results: Both the control groups and the patients with LBP groups had stati
stically significant lower levels of aerobic capacity than a large group of
Canadians tested in the early 1980s, the benchmark on which the age- and s
ex-matched standardized scores are based. The percentile rank of aerobic ca
pacity for the patients with LBP was statistically significant and lower th
an those measures for the controls. Patients with LBP who completed the exe
rcise therapy showed statistically significant improvement in percentile ra
nk aerobic capacity, as well as statistically significant decreases in pain
and disability scores. Aerobic capacity improved to a level above the norm
.
Conclusions: This study supports the hypothesis that exercise may be helpfu
l in the management of chronic LBP.