期刊论文详细信息
BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders
Time trends in single versus concomitant neck and back pain in finnish adolescents: results from national cross-sectional surveys from 1991 to 2011
Arja Hannele Rimpelä1  Ashraf Abdel Salam El-Metwally2  Minna Kristiina Ståhl3 
[1] Department of Adolescent Psychiatry, Tampere University Hospital, Pitkäniemi Hospital, Pitkäniemi 33380, Finland;Aberdeen Pain Research Collaboration (Epidemiology Group), Institute of Applied Health Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, UK;University of Helsinki, Hjelt Institute, PO Box 40, Helsinki 00014, Finland
关键词: Prevalence;    Serial cross-sectional design;    Time trend;    Adolescent;    Musculoskeletal pain;    Spinal pain;    Concomitant neck and low back pain;    Low back pain;    Neck pain;   
Others  :  1122137
DOI  :  10.1186/1471-2474-15-296
 received in 2014-03-05, accepted in 2014-09-03,  发布年份 2014
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【 摘 要 】

Background

Previous studies, in late 20th century, suggest an increase in the prevalence of neck pain and low back pain among children and adolescents, when neck and low back pain were studied separately. This study investigated time trends in adolescent spinal pain between 1991 and 2011 by classifying pain into the following three classes: neck pain alone, low back pain alone, and concomitant neck and low back pain.

Methods

Representative samples of 12 to 18-year-old Finns were sent a questionnaire in 1991, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2009 and 2011. Information was gathered about the frequency of neck and low back pain with a six-month recall period. Statistical methods used included descriptive analysis, and generalized linear models.

Results

The total number of respondents in these eight comparable cross-sectional surveys was 51 044 with a response proportion of 64%. The prevalence of concomitant neck and low back pain showed a steady increase from 1991 to 2009/2011; the prevalence almost quadrupled among 12-14-year-olds girls (from 2% to 7.5%), and more than doubled among 12-14-year-old boys (from 1.6% to 3.8%), and among 16-18-year old boys (from 4.2 to 9.9%) and girls (6.9% to 15.9%). The prevalence of neck pain alone only increased in the 1990s (e.g. among 16-18-year-old girls 22.9% in 1991, 29.2% in 1999, and 29.5% in 2011), while the prevalence of low back pain alone remained relatively constant during the last two decades (e.g. among 16-18-year-old girls 4% in 1991, 3.1% in 1999, and 3.7% in 2011).

Conclusions

Concomitant neck and low back pain has constantly increased in the last two decades among adolescents, while single neck pain has only increased in the 1990s. Single low back pain has remained relatively constant. Thus, earlier detected increase in low back pain in the 1990s was explained by the increase in concomitant neck and low back pain. Differences in the time trends in the three pain conditions might suggest, at least partly, different risk factors and aetiology for single- and multisite spinal pain among adolescents. This hypothesis needs further investigations.

【 授权许可】

   
2014 Ståhl et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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