Early predictors of the long-term outcome of low back pain - results of a 22-year prospective cohort study from general practice

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Early predictors of the long-term outcome of low back pain - results of a 22-year prospective cohort study from general practice. / Lonnberg, F.; Pedersen, P.; Siersma, V.

In: Family Practice, Vol. 27, No. 6, 2010, p. 609-614.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Lonnberg, F, Pedersen, P & Siersma, V 2010, 'Early predictors of the long-term outcome of low back pain - results of a 22-year prospective cohort study from general practice', Family Practice, vol. 27, no. 6, pp. 609-614.

APA

Lonnberg, F., Pedersen, P., & Siersma, V. (2010). Early predictors of the long-term outcome of low back pain - results of a 22-year prospective cohort study from general practice. Family Practice, 27(6), 609-614.

Vancouver

Lonnberg F, Pedersen P, Siersma V. Early predictors of the long-term outcome of low back pain - results of a 22-year prospective cohort study from general practice. Family Practice. 2010;27(6):609-614.

Author

Lonnberg, F. ; Pedersen, P. ; Siersma, V. / Early predictors of the long-term outcome of low back pain - results of a 22-year prospective cohort study from general practice. In: Family Practice. 2010 ; Vol. 27, No. 6. pp. 609-614.

Bibtex

@article{2a31b880b0f211df825b000ea68e967b,
title = "Early predictors of the long-term outcome of low back pain - results of a 22-year prospective cohort study from general practice",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Poor outcome of low back pain in patients seen in general practice is related to the pain history, physical impairment and working conditions, at least in short-term follow-ups. We do not know if these findings hold, seen from the perspective of decades. OBJECTIVES: To show if patients consulting the GP for the first time regarding an episode of low back pain have excess poor outcome 22 years later and, if so, whether the best predictors are data based on the symptoms, clinical signs or work history. The design of the study is a 22-year follow-up of an inception cohort of 78 patients with low back pain. The setting of the study is a single general practice in a suburb of Copenhagen, Denmark. METHODS: Selected predictors were separated into pain characteristics, clinical signs and indicators related to the work history. Outcome measures were the 1-year period prevalence of low back pain, use of painkillers for low back pain, use of health care providers, impairments due to low back pain and unfitness for work caused by low back pain. The influence of the predictors was assessed by relative risks. RESULTS: After 22 years, four out of five patients still experienced low back pain. The perception of poor working conditions correlates with recurrent low back pain, intake of painkillers and limitations to daily life. CONCLUSION: Compared with pain history and clinical findings, the perception of workload is a better predictor of the long-term outcome of low back pain Udgivelsesdato: 2010/8/3",
author = "F. Lonnberg and P. Pedersen and V. Siersma",
note = "DA - 20100804IS - 1460-2229 (Electronic)IS - 0263-2136 (Linking)LA - ENGPT - JOURNAL ARTICLE",
year = "2010",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "609--614",
journal = "Family Practice",
issn = "0263-2136",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Early predictors of the long-term outcome of low back pain - results of a 22-year prospective cohort study from general practice

AU - Lonnberg, F.

AU - Pedersen, P.

AU - Siersma, V.

N1 - DA - 20100804IS - 1460-2229 (Electronic)IS - 0263-2136 (Linking)LA - ENGPT - JOURNAL ARTICLE

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - BACKGROUND: Poor outcome of low back pain in patients seen in general practice is related to the pain history, physical impairment and working conditions, at least in short-term follow-ups. We do not know if these findings hold, seen from the perspective of decades. OBJECTIVES: To show if patients consulting the GP for the first time regarding an episode of low back pain have excess poor outcome 22 years later and, if so, whether the best predictors are data based on the symptoms, clinical signs or work history. The design of the study is a 22-year follow-up of an inception cohort of 78 patients with low back pain. The setting of the study is a single general practice in a suburb of Copenhagen, Denmark. METHODS: Selected predictors were separated into pain characteristics, clinical signs and indicators related to the work history. Outcome measures were the 1-year period prevalence of low back pain, use of painkillers for low back pain, use of health care providers, impairments due to low back pain and unfitness for work caused by low back pain. The influence of the predictors was assessed by relative risks. RESULTS: After 22 years, four out of five patients still experienced low back pain. The perception of poor working conditions correlates with recurrent low back pain, intake of painkillers and limitations to daily life. CONCLUSION: Compared with pain history and clinical findings, the perception of workload is a better predictor of the long-term outcome of low back pain Udgivelsesdato: 2010/8/3

AB - BACKGROUND: Poor outcome of low back pain in patients seen in general practice is related to the pain history, physical impairment and working conditions, at least in short-term follow-ups. We do not know if these findings hold, seen from the perspective of decades. OBJECTIVES: To show if patients consulting the GP for the first time regarding an episode of low back pain have excess poor outcome 22 years later and, if so, whether the best predictors are data based on the symptoms, clinical signs or work history. The design of the study is a 22-year follow-up of an inception cohort of 78 patients with low back pain. The setting of the study is a single general practice in a suburb of Copenhagen, Denmark. METHODS: Selected predictors were separated into pain characteristics, clinical signs and indicators related to the work history. Outcome measures were the 1-year period prevalence of low back pain, use of painkillers for low back pain, use of health care providers, impairments due to low back pain and unfitness for work caused by low back pain. The influence of the predictors was assessed by relative risks. RESULTS: After 22 years, four out of five patients still experienced low back pain. The perception of poor working conditions correlates with recurrent low back pain, intake of painkillers and limitations to daily life. CONCLUSION: Compared with pain history and clinical findings, the perception of workload is a better predictor of the long-term outcome of low back pain Udgivelsesdato: 2010/8/3

M3 - Journal article

VL - 27

SP - 609

EP - 614

JO - Family Practice

JF - Family Practice

SN - 0263-2136

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 21593283