The effects of walking intervention in patients with chronic low back pain: A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to determine the effectiveness of walking interventions on pain, disability, and quality of life in patients with chronic low back pain compared to other non-pharmacological interventions.
Results Summary
Walking was found to be as effective as other non-pharmacological interventions in reducing pain and disability in short- and intermediate-term follow-ups, based on low- to moderate-quality evidence. No significant differences were observed in long-term outcomes.
Population
Patients with chronic low back pain (LBP).
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Follow-up durations varied: short-term (<3 months), intermediate-term (3-12 months), and long-term (>12 months).
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
walking intervention | decrease | pain | patients with chronic low back pain | - | was as effective as other non-pharmacological interventions on pain and disability reduction | #1 |
walking intervention | decrease | disability | patients with chronic low back pain | - | was as effective as other non-pharmacological interventions on pain and disability reduction | #2 |
walking intervention | decrease | pain | patients with chronic low back pain | - | can be recommended in the management of chronic LBP to reduce pain and disability | #3 |
walking intervention | decrease | disability | patients with chronic low back pain | - | can be recommended in the management of chronic LBP to reduce pain and disability | #4 |
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials was to gain insight into the effectiveness of walking intervention on pain, disability, and quality of life in patients with chronic low back pain (LBP) at post intervention and follow ups. METHOD: Six electronic databases (PubMed, Science Direct, Web of Science, Scopus, PEDro and The Cochrane library) were searched from 1980 to October 2017. The following keywords were used: Walk* or Pedometer* or Accelerometer* or Treadmill* paired with "Back pain", "Low back pain", "Chronic low back pain", "LBP", or "Backache". Randomized controlled trials in patients with chronic LBP were included if they compared the effects of walking intervention to non-pharmacological interventions. Pain, disability, and quality of life were the primary health outcomes. RESULTS: Nine studies were suitable for meta-analysis. Data was analyzed according to the duration of follow-up (short-term, < 3 months; intermediate-term, between 3 and 12 months; long-term, > 12 months). Low- to moderate-quality evidence suggests that walking intervention in patients with chronic LBP was as effective as other non-pharmacological interventions on pain and disability reduction in both short- and intermediate-term follow ups. CONCLUSIONS: Unless supplementary high-quality studies provide different evidence, walking, which is easy to perform and highly accessible, can be recommended in the management of chronic LBP to reduce pain and disability.