Lumbar Spine Coronal Balance Parameters as a Predictor of the Rehabilitation Management Outcomes in Patients With Radiculopathy Due to Lumbar Disc Herniation A Multicenter Prospective Cohort Study

Lumbar Spine Coronal Balance Parameters as a Predictor of the Rehabilitation Management Outcomes in Patients With Radiculopathy Due to Lumbar Disc Herniation A Multicenter Prospective Cohort Study

Authors

  • Yaser AH Aljallad
  • Ibrahim M. Moustafa
  • Mohamed Badr
  • Nouran Hamza
  • Paul A. Oakley
  • Deed E. Harrison

Publication

Preprints (www.preprints.org) | NOT PEER-REVIEWED | Posted: 13 October 2023 doi:10.20944/preprints202310.0803.v1

Article Link

Lumbar Spine Coronal Balance Parameters as a Predictor of the Rehabilitation Management Outcomes in Patients With Radiculopathy Due to Lumbar Disc Herniation A Multicenter Prospective Cohort Study

Abstract

A multicenter, prospective cohort study conducted in 5 physiotherapy clinics in the UAE from January 2021 to March 2023 to assess coronal lumbar spine radiographic parameters as a predictor of conservative therapy outcomes in patients suffering from low back and leg pain due to lumbar disc herniation (HNP). Ninety patients (mean age 44 yrs., 54% male) with lumbar HNP underwent conservative therapy. All participants received lumbar spine MRI and radiography to assess spine alignment. Interventions included specific exercises, diathermy, traction, education, a home-based exercise pro-gram, and medications. Detailed demographic data was collected. Follow-up was 6-months after discharge. A successful outcome was based on a minimum of the following four outcomes: (1) reduction of pain by 17.5 points (0–100 NRS); (2) fatigue reduction by 7.5 points; (3) distress reduction by 5 points; and (4) interference reduction by 9.5 points. At 6-month follow-up it was found that patient age, education, and radio-graphic determined lumbosacral angle measures significantly affected the odds of a successful outcome. Increasing age 1-year significantly decreased the odds of success of improving pain, fatigue (OR = 0.85, p = 0.016) and interference scores (OR = 0.89, p = 0.042) by 15%, 15%, and 11% respectively. Lower education significantly increased the odds of success for improving pain, fatigue, and interference by 26.18, 26.18, and 7.5 (p = 0.006, = 0.006, and = 0.029 respectively). Increasing (worsening) the radiographic lumbosacral angle by each 1° significantly reduced the odds of success for improving pain, fatigue, distress, and interference by 3.52, 3.52, 27.99, and 2.55, respectively (p < 0.001, < 0.001, = 0.003, = 0.001). Our findings indicate that younger age, less education, and better coronal radiological lumbar spine alignment all had a substantial impact on the likelihood of success of 6-month outcomes in patients suffering from chronic lower back pain and radiculopathy due to HNP.

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