Effects of specific muscle activation for low back pain on activity limitation, pain, work participation, or recurrence: A systematic review

Specific muscle activation (SMA) is a commonly used treatment for people with low back pain (LBP) however there is variability in systematic reviews to date on effectiveness. This may be because of the use of eligibility criteria incongruent with original descriptions of the SMA approach. The purpos...

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Veröffentlicht in:Musculoskeletal science & practice 2020-12, Vol.50, p.102276-102276, Article 102276
Hauptverfasser: Ford, Jon J., Bower, Shannon E., Ford, Isabella, de Mello, Mariana M., Carneiro, Samantha R., Balasundaram, Arun P., Hahne, Andrew J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Specific muscle activation (SMA) is a commonly used treatment for people with low back pain (LBP) however there is variability in systematic reviews to date on effectiveness. This may be because of the use of eligibility criteria incongruent with original descriptions of the SMA approach. The purpose of this study was to determine the effectiveness of SMA on improving activity limitation, pain, work participation or recurrence for people with LBP. Systematic review Computer databases were searched for randomised controlled trials (RCTs) published in English up to September 6, 2019. Eligibility criteria were chosen to ensure all clinically relevant RCTs were included and trials of poorly defined or executed SMA excluded. Outcomes for activity limitation, pain, work participation or recurrence were extracted. Twenty-eight RCTs were included in this review with 18 being considered high quality. GRADE quality assessment revealed low to high quality evidence that SMA was more effective than exercise, conservative medical management, multi-modal physiotherapy, placebo, advice and minimal intervention. This systematic review is the first to evaluate the effectiveness of SMA in accordance with the original clinical descriptions. We found significant evidence supporting the effectiveness of SMA for the treatment of LBP. Where significant results were demonstrated, the between-group differences were in many comparisons clinically important based on contemporary definitions and an effect size of 0.5 or more. Practitioners should consider SMA as a treatment component in their patients with LBP. •This systematic review evaluates effectiveness of SMA as per original clinical descriptions.•Specific muscle activation is more effective than other conservative treatment and placebo.•Practitioners should consider SMA as a treatment component in their patients with LBP.
ISSN:2468-7812
2468-7812
DOI:10.1016/j.msksp.2020.102276