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Comparative Study
. 2002 Jun;83(6):816-21.
doi: 10.1053/apmr.2002.32826.

Muscle activation patterns in subjects with and without low back pain

Affiliations
Comparative Study

Muscle activation patterns in subjects with and without low back pain

Karen L Newcomer et al. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2002 Jun.

Abstract

Objective: To analyze muscle activation patterns during various footplate perturbations, used as proprioceptive challenges in patients with low back pain (LBP) and in controls.

Design: A prospective and controlled comparative study.

Setting: Outpatient clinic.

Participants: Twenty subjects with chronic LBP and 20 age- and sex-matched controls.

Interventions: The subjects underwent 5 sets of footplate perturbations in 3 directions with 16 perturbations for each set.

Main outcome measures: Latency, frequency, and asymmetry of muscle activation of the erector spinae, rectus abdominus, anterior tibialis, and gastrocnemius muscles were measured bilaterally with surface electromyography.

Results: In the toes-up movements, subjects with LBP were significantly less likely to activate their rectus abdominus muscles (P=.02), and they were more likely to exhibit asymmetric muscle activation in the smaller forward movements (odds ratio=4.1, P=.03). The latter result appears to be driven by asymmetric contraction of the erector spinae and rectus abdominus.

Conclusions: Significantly more subjects with LBP than control subjects exhibited absent firing of trunk muscles during 2 of the 5 footplate perturbations. These results suggest an abnormality of the neuromuscular loop and may represent altered proprioception.

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