Significance of Physical Performance Tests for Patients with Low Back Pain

Standard

Significance of Physical Performance Tests for Patients with Low Back Pain. / Pfingsten, Michael; Lueder, Susanne; Lüdtke, Kerstin; Petzke, Frank; Hildebrandt, Jan.

in: PAIN MED, Jahrgang 15, Nr. 7, 2014, S. 1211-1221.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Pfingsten, M, Lueder, S, Lüdtke, K, Petzke, F & Hildebrandt, J 2014, 'Significance of Physical Performance Tests for Patients with Low Back Pain', PAIN MED, Jg. 15, Nr. 7, S. 1211-1221. https://doi.org/10.1111/pme.12482

APA

Pfingsten, M., Lueder, S., Lüdtke, K., Petzke, F., & Hildebrandt, J. (2014). Significance of Physical Performance Tests for Patients with Low Back Pain. PAIN MED, 15(7), 1211-1221. https://doi.org/10.1111/pme.12482

Vancouver

Pfingsten M, Lueder S, Lüdtke K, Petzke F, Hildebrandt J. Significance of Physical Performance Tests for Patients with Low Back Pain. PAIN MED. 2014;15(7):1211-1221. https://doi.org/10.1111/pme.12482

Bibtex

@article{da59e164a07e4ec8a558b8d9a1c42b22,
title = "Significance of Physical Performance Tests for Patients with Low Back Pain",
abstract = "OBJECTIVES: Several research groups established functional tests to obtain performance data for mobility-related activities in patients with low back pain (LBP). In our study we aimed to assess the construct validity and associations with other measures of a battery of functional tests in relationship to physical performance on the one hand and physical capacity and variables of pain, disability and psychological variables on the other.DESIGN: Eight physical performance tests of everyday activities such as climbing stairs, picking up an object from the floor, bending forward, and sitting up from supine position etc. were evaluated in 106 patients with LBP and 106 control subjects.RESULTS: Distribution of results in each test demonstrated a marked overlap in a number of tests between those with and those without back pain. In a factor analysis we found pronounced differences in the factorial structure of the data between patients and control subjects as well in the bivariate correlations between functional test results. There was a strong relationship between self-report disability rating (FFbH-R) and physical performance tests especially in patients whereas physical capacity tests had less relationship in patients and not at all in the control subjects.CONCLUSION: In contrast to the past and present literature, our results suggest that physical performance tests have an inherent problem to sharply differentiate patients with back pain from healthy controls and problems with inter-rater reliability. Physical performance seems to be more a matter of patients' perception of generalized disability than of restricted function.",
author = "Michael Pfingsten and Susanne Lueder and Kerstin L{\"u}dtke and Frank Petzke and Jan Hildebrandt",
note = "Wiley Periodicals, Inc.",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1111/pme.12482",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "1211--1221",
journal = "PAIN MED",
issn = "1526-2375",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Significance of Physical Performance Tests for Patients with Low Back Pain

AU - Pfingsten, Michael

AU - Lueder, Susanne

AU - Lüdtke, Kerstin

AU - Petzke, Frank

AU - Hildebrandt, Jan

N1 - Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - OBJECTIVES: Several research groups established functional tests to obtain performance data for mobility-related activities in patients with low back pain (LBP). In our study we aimed to assess the construct validity and associations with other measures of a battery of functional tests in relationship to physical performance on the one hand and physical capacity and variables of pain, disability and psychological variables on the other.DESIGN: Eight physical performance tests of everyday activities such as climbing stairs, picking up an object from the floor, bending forward, and sitting up from supine position etc. were evaluated in 106 patients with LBP and 106 control subjects.RESULTS: Distribution of results in each test demonstrated a marked overlap in a number of tests between those with and those without back pain. In a factor analysis we found pronounced differences in the factorial structure of the data between patients and control subjects as well in the bivariate correlations between functional test results. There was a strong relationship between self-report disability rating (FFbH-R) and physical performance tests especially in patients whereas physical capacity tests had less relationship in patients and not at all in the control subjects.CONCLUSION: In contrast to the past and present literature, our results suggest that physical performance tests have an inherent problem to sharply differentiate patients with back pain from healthy controls and problems with inter-rater reliability. Physical performance seems to be more a matter of patients' perception of generalized disability than of restricted function.

AB - OBJECTIVES: Several research groups established functional tests to obtain performance data for mobility-related activities in patients with low back pain (LBP). In our study we aimed to assess the construct validity and associations with other measures of a battery of functional tests in relationship to physical performance on the one hand and physical capacity and variables of pain, disability and psychological variables on the other.DESIGN: Eight physical performance tests of everyday activities such as climbing stairs, picking up an object from the floor, bending forward, and sitting up from supine position etc. were evaluated in 106 patients with LBP and 106 control subjects.RESULTS: Distribution of results in each test demonstrated a marked overlap in a number of tests between those with and those without back pain. In a factor analysis we found pronounced differences in the factorial structure of the data between patients and control subjects as well in the bivariate correlations between functional test results. There was a strong relationship between self-report disability rating (FFbH-R) and physical performance tests especially in patients whereas physical capacity tests had less relationship in patients and not at all in the control subjects.CONCLUSION: In contrast to the past and present literature, our results suggest that physical performance tests have an inherent problem to sharply differentiate patients with back pain from healthy controls and problems with inter-rater reliability. Physical performance seems to be more a matter of patients' perception of generalized disability than of restricted function.

U2 - 10.1111/pme.12482

DO - 10.1111/pme.12482

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 24931593

VL - 15

SP - 1211

EP - 1221

JO - PAIN MED

JF - PAIN MED

SN - 1526-2375

IS - 7

ER -