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The natural course of low back pain from childhood to young adulthood - a systematic review.

Tina JungeNiels WedderkoppEleanor BoylePer Kjaer
Published in: Chiropractic & manual therapies (2019)
Although methodological heterogeneity, mainly due to different age ranges, an indication of a natural course of LBP was seen across studies. The majority of children and adolescents repeatedly reporting no or low probability of LBP. With recall periods between one week to three months and sampling rates ranging from one to four years, a very low rate repeatedly reported LBP, and approximately one-fifth to one-third of children and adolescents had fluctuating reports of LBP. A need of future research of LBP trajectories with short reporting period lengths and narrower sampling windows in a long-term perspective is emphasized in order to study childhood influences on the development of LBP throughout life.
Keyphrases
  • adverse drug
  • early life
  • depressive symptoms
  • single cell
  • current status
  • young adults
  • childhood cancer
  • placebo controlled