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Journal Article

Citation

Seay JF, Shing T, Wilburn K, Westrick R, Kardouni J. Med. Sci. Sports Exerc. 2018; 50(5): 987-994.

Affiliation

Military Performance Division, USARIEM, Natick, MA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1249/MSS.0000000000001523

PMID

29252971

Abstract

Low back pain (LBP) and lower extremity injuries (LEI) are primary reasons for lost duty days and disability among military populations.

PURPOSE: This study examined acute LEI as a risk factor for developing LBP and examined the time to incident LBP between individuals with and without a history of LEI.

METHODS: This retrospective cohort study examined U.S. Army medical and personnel data from the Total Army Injury and Health Outcomes Database (TAIHOD) for the years 2007-2011. Anderson-Gill Cox Regression methods were used to examine the change in LEI status over time and changes in demographic covariates. Adjusted hazard ratios (HR) for LBP following LEI were calculated from the Cox regression model for each calendar year. An accelerated failure time (AFT) model was used to describe time to LBP, and mean time to event and adjusted time ratios (TR) following LEI were calculated from the AFT model for each year. Overall HR and TR for LBP following LEI were calculated over the 5 calendar years using variance-based weighted averages.

RESULTS: Each yearly analysis included an average of 213,307 Soldiers; on average for each year 8.44% of Soldiers developed LBP and 11.54% had previous LEI. The pooled time ratio showed Soldiers with a LEI had a 10% decrease in mean survival times to LBP compared to those without a LEI [TR=0.901, 95%CI (0.897, 0.905)]. The weighted average HR showed that Soldiers with a LEI had 1.7 times the hazard of LBP compared to those without LEI [HR=1.70, 95%CI (1.66, 1.74)].

CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that a potential second order effect of LEI is an increased short-term risk for developing LBP, which should be considered during rehabilitation planning.


Language: en

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