2017
DOI: 10.2519/jospt.2017.7434
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Making Sense of Low Back Pain and Pain-Related Fear

Abstract: Synopsis Pain-related fear is implicated in the transition from acute to chronic low back pain and the persistence of disabling low back pain, making it a key target for physical therapy intervention. The current understanding of pain-related fear is that it is a psychopathological problem, whereby people who catastrophize about the meaning of pain become trapped in a vicious cycle of avoidance behavior, pain, and disability, as recognized in the fear-avoidance model. However, there is evidence that pain-relat… Show more

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Cited by 139 publications
(137 citation statements)
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References 42 publications
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“…First, structural changes observed on imaging that are highly prevalent in pain free populations, such as rotator cuff tears, intervertebral disc degeneration, labral tears and cartilage changes, are ascribed to individuals as a diagnosis for their condition. In this context, this information may result in the individual believing that their body is damaged, fragile and in need of protection, resulting in a cascade of movement and activity avoidance behaviours and seeking interventions to correct the structural deficits 1. This trend has led to exponential increases in elective surgery rates and associated costs, while the efficacy of repairing (eg, rotator cuff and medical meniscal tears), reshaping (eg, subacromial decompression) or replacing (eg, lumbar intervertebral discs) the structures considered to be at fault has been substantially challenged 2–10…”
Section: The Current Approach To Musculoskeletal Pain Is Failingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, structural changes observed on imaging that are highly prevalent in pain free populations, such as rotator cuff tears, intervertebral disc degeneration, labral tears and cartilage changes, are ascribed to individuals as a diagnosis for their condition. In this context, this information may result in the individual believing that their body is damaged, fragile and in need of protection, resulting in a cascade of movement and activity avoidance behaviours and seeking interventions to correct the structural deficits 1. This trend has led to exponential increases in elective surgery rates and associated costs, while the efficacy of repairing (eg, rotator cuff and medical meniscal tears), reshaping (eg, subacromial decompression) or replacing (eg, lumbar intervertebral discs) the structures considered to be at fault has been substantially challenged 2–10…”
Section: The Current Approach To Musculoskeletal Pain Is Failingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Education on the neurophysiology of pain as described in Jones, Valenzuela, Booth, Taylor and Barry (), emphasizing patients’ feelings of control over the pain process, was provided. Fear‐avoidance behaviours were discouraged, utilizing the fear‐avoidance model as described by Bunzi et al ().…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Trunk motor control, including the identification of aberrant movements, was noted during seated and standing lumbar mobility assessment. Aberrant movement is defined as altered lumbopelvic rhythm, deviation from the sagittal plane, instability catch or judder and/or painful arch of motion, and its presence could be a result of fear-avoidance movement(Bunzli, Smith, Schutze, Lin, & O'Sullivan, 2017;Walston & Yake, 2016).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Individuals with both acute and persistent low back pain have already been shown to have decreased quality of sleep [68][69][70]. In addition, sleep disturbances are labeled as one of many pain sensitizing factors in individuals with low back pain [71].…”
Section: Sleep Dysfunctionmentioning
confidence: 99%