Cargando…

A Correlation between Low Back Pain and Associated Factors: A Study Involving 772 Patients who Had Undergone General Physical Examination

Many factors are associated with the development of low back pain. Among them, exercise, obesity, smoking, age, educational level and stress are the most common. This study examined the association of these factors with low back pain. An additional aim was to determine a procedure for preventing low...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kwon, Min A, Shim, Woo Seok, Kim, Myung Hee, Gwak, Mi Sook, Hahm, Tae Soo, Kim, Gaab Soo, Kim, Chung Su, Choi, Yoon Ho, Park, Jeong Heon, Cho, Hyun Sung, Kim, Tae Hyeong
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Korean Academy of Medical Sciences 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2721934/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17179692
http://dx.doi.org/10.3346/jkms.2006.21.6.1086
_version_ 1782170257801084928
author Kwon, Min A
Shim, Woo Seok
Kim, Myung Hee
Gwak, Mi Sook
Hahm, Tae Soo
Kim, Gaab Soo
Kim, Chung Su
Choi, Yoon Ho
Park, Jeong Heon
Cho, Hyun Sung
Kim, Tae Hyeong
author_facet Kwon, Min A
Shim, Woo Seok
Kim, Myung Hee
Gwak, Mi Sook
Hahm, Tae Soo
Kim, Gaab Soo
Kim, Chung Su
Choi, Yoon Ho
Park, Jeong Heon
Cho, Hyun Sung
Kim, Tae Hyeong
author_sort Kwon, Min A
collection PubMed
description Many factors are associated with the development of low back pain. Among them, exercise, obesity, smoking, age, educational level and stress are the most common. This study examined the association of these factors with low back pain. An additional aim was to determine a procedure for preventing low back pain. This study analyzed the responses to a questionnaire sent to 772 individuals who had undergone a medical examination at this hospital in 2003 and excluded the individuals who had shown symptoms or their test results indicated a particular disease. Assuming that there were no variables, individuals who exercised regularly 3-4 times per week would have a lower chance of having low back pain than those who did not exercise regularly. The analysis revealed that individuals with a college degree or higher education have a lower chance of experiencing low back pain than those with only a high school education or even college drop-outs. When the other variables were constant, age, extent of obesity (body mass index), smoking and level of stress were not found to affect the development of low back pain. The level of education was associated with the development of low back pain. However, regular exercise 3-4 times per week or more would be most effective in reducing the incidence and duration of low back pain.
format Text
id pubmed-2721934
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2006
publisher The Korean Academy of Medical Sciences
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-27219342009-08-07 A Correlation between Low Back Pain and Associated Factors: A Study Involving 772 Patients who Had Undergone General Physical Examination Kwon, Min A Shim, Woo Seok Kim, Myung Hee Gwak, Mi Sook Hahm, Tae Soo Kim, Gaab Soo Kim, Chung Su Choi, Yoon Ho Park, Jeong Heon Cho, Hyun Sung Kim, Tae Hyeong J Korean Med Sci Original Article Many factors are associated with the development of low back pain. Among them, exercise, obesity, smoking, age, educational level and stress are the most common. This study examined the association of these factors with low back pain. An additional aim was to determine a procedure for preventing low back pain. This study analyzed the responses to a questionnaire sent to 772 individuals who had undergone a medical examination at this hospital in 2003 and excluded the individuals who had shown symptoms or their test results indicated a particular disease. Assuming that there were no variables, individuals who exercised regularly 3-4 times per week would have a lower chance of having low back pain than those who did not exercise regularly. The analysis revealed that individuals with a college degree or higher education have a lower chance of experiencing low back pain than those with only a high school education or even college drop-outs. When the other variables were constant, age, extent of obesity (body mass index), smoking and level of stress were not found to affect the development of low back pain. The level of education was associated with the development of low back pain. However, regular exercise 3-4 times per week or more would be most effective in reducing the incidence and duration of low back pain. The Korean Academy of Medical Sciences 2006-12 2006-12-31 /pmc/articles/PMC2721934/ /pubmed/17179692 http://dx.doi.org/10.3346/jkms.2006.21.6.1086 Text en Copyright © 2006 The Korean Academy of Medical Sciences http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Kwon, Min A
Shim, Woo Seok
Kim, Myung Hee
Gwak, Mi Sook
Hahm, Tae Soo
Kim, Gaab Soo
Kim, Chung Su
Choi, Yoon Ho
Park, Jeong Heon
Cho, Hyun Sung
Kim, Tae Hyeong
A Correlation between Low Back Pain and Associated Factors: A Study Involving 772 Patients who Had Undergone General Physical Examination
title A Correlation between Low Back Pain and Associated Factors: A Study Involving 772 Patients who Had Undergone General Physical Examination
title_full A Correlation between Low Back Pain and Associated Factors: A Study Involving 772 Patients who Had Undergone General Physical Examination
title_fullStr A Correlation between Low Back Pain and Associated Factors: A Study Involving 772 Patients who Had Undergone General Physical Examination
title_full_unstemmed A Correlation between Low Back Pain and Associated Factors: A Study Involving 772 Patients who Had Undergone General Physical Examination
title_short A Correlation between Low Back Pain and Associated Factors: A Study Involving 772 Patients who Had Undergone General Physical Examination
title_sort correlation between low back pain and associated factors: a study involving 772 patients who had undergone general physical examination
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2721934/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17179692
http://dx.doi.org/10.3346/jkms.2006.21.6.1086
work_keys_str_mv AT kwonmina acorrelationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT shimwooseok acorrelationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT kimmyunghee acorrelationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT gwakmisook acorrelationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT hahmtaesoo acorrelationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT kimgaabsoo acorrelationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT kimchungsu acorrelationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT choiyoonho acorrelationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT parkjeongheon acorrelationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT chohyunsung acorrelationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT kimtaehyeong acorrelationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT kwonmina correlationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT shimwooseok correlationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT kimmyunghee correlationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT gwakmisook correlationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT hahmtaesoo correlationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT kimgaabsoo correlationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT kimchungsu correlationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT choiyoonho correlationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT parkjeongheon correlationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT chohyunsung correlationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination
AT kimtaehyeong correlationbetweenlowbackpainandassociatedfactorsastudyinvolving772patientswhohadundergonegeneralphysicalexamination