Abstract
The study compared superficial trunk muscle activity and postural control among an active extension subgroup of people with nonspecific chronic low back pain (AE-NSCLBP) with painfree controls during functional tasks. Thirty-two people (17 people with low back pain [LBP] and 15 painfree controls) participated in this study. Muscle activity of 5 trunk muscles and postural control were investigated during both standing tasks (eyes open/closed; single/double-leg balance) and dynamic functional tasks (spinal forward flexion and return, and a sit to stand transfer). Results showed that during single-leg standing, people with AE-NSCLBP exhibit higher muscle activity than painfree controls for 3 trunk muscles, especially with their eyes closed. There were no significant differences in muscle activity between eye conditions during double-leg standing and sit to stand transfer, forward flexion, and return from flexion. The AE-NSCLBP subgroup also demonstrated significantly impaired postural co
Original language | Undefined/Unknown |
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Pages (from-to) | 1 - 8 |
Journal | Journal of Applied Biomechanics |
Volume | 40 |
Issue number | 1 |
Publication status | Published - 2024 |
Keywords
- Low Back Pain -- Physiopathology
- Chronic Pain -- Physiopathology
- Torso -- Physiopathology
- Muscle
- Skeletal -- Physiopathology
- Balance
- Postural -- Evaluation
- Functional Assessment
- Extension
- Human
- Cross Sectional Studies
- Comparative Studies
- Standing
- Flexion
- Spine
- Rising
- One Leg Stand
- Electromyography
- Adult
- Female
- Male