BackgroundLow back pain with onset during pregnancy is common and approximately one out of three women have disabling pain. The pathogenesis of the pain condition is uncertain and there is no information on the role of physical fitness. Whether poorer physical conditioning is a cause or effect of back pain is also disputed and information from prospective studies needed.MethodsA cohort of pregnant women, recruited from maternal health care centers in central Sweden, were examined regarding estimated peak oxygen uptake by cycle ergometer test in early pregnancy, reported physical activity prior to pregnancy, basic characteristics, back pain during pregnancy and back pain postpartum.ResultsBack pain during the current pregnancy was reported by nearly 80% of the women. At the postpartum appointment this prevalence was 40%. No association was displayed between estimated peak oxygen uptake and incidence of back pain during and after pregnancy, adjusted for physical activity, back pain before present pregnancy, previous deliveries, age and weight. A significant inverse association was found between estimated peak oxygen uptake and back pain intensity during pregnancy and a direct association post partum, in a fully adjusted multiple linear regression analysis.ConclusionsEstimated peak oxygen uptake and reported physical activity in early pregnancy displayed no influence on the onset of subsequent back pain during or after pregnancy, where the time sequence support the hypothesis that poorer physical deconditioning is not a cause but a consequence of the back pain condition. The mechanism for the attenuating effect of increased oxygen uptake on back pain intensity is uncertain.
BackgroundWomen are recommended to perform regular exercise during pregnancy but the impact of physical fitness on duration of gestation and miscarriage is inconsistent. In addition, a dose-response relation between the amount of weekly exercise and increased risk of miscarriage in early pregnancy has been observed. Previous studies have mostly used an epidemiologic method. Larger studies using careful measurement of physical fitness are needed. Besides physical fitness, maternal circulating concentrations of the hormone relaxin have been associated with decreased duration of gestation.MethodsA prospective cohort including 20 women with miscarriage and 460 women with spontaneous onset of labour, recruited from maternal health care centres in central Sweden, were examined in early pregnancy regarding estimated absolute peak oxygen uptake (peak, est.) by cycle ergometer test, and maternal circulating serum relaxin concentrations.ResultsWomen with miscarriage displayed the highest level of absolute peak, est. (2.61 l/min) and the lowest serum relaxin concentrations (640 ng/l). Among women with spontaneous onset of labour, the mean absolute peak, est. increased successively from the lowest estimated oxygen uptake of 2.31 l/min among those with preterm birth (n = 28), to an oxygen uptake of 2.49 l/min among women with postterm birth (n = 31). An opposite trend was shown regarding serum relaxin concentrations from women with miscarriage to those with postterm birth. Serum relaxin concentrations, but not absolute peak, est. was significantly and independently associated with duration of gestation in women with miscarriages, and absolute peak, est., age and multiple pregnancy were independently associated with duration of gestation in women with spontaneous onset of labour.ConclusionsPhysical fitness appears to be a protective factor of established pregnancies and not significantly involved in the risk of early miscarriage. Additional studies are needed to more clearly define the role of relaxin in miscarriage.
Pregnancy had a moderate influence on physical fitness and perceived health half a year postpartum despite less regular physical activity during pregnancy. VO(2 peak, est.) in early pregnancy was positively correlated to perceived physical health.
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