Yoga as an Adjunctive Treatment for Chronic Low Back Pain: A Narrative Review.

IF 2.6 2区 医学 Q2 ANESTHESIOLOGY
Pain physician Pub Date : 2024-09-01
Andrea Nikolis, Louis Nikolis, Adele Meron
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Yoga has been recognized for its many mental and physical health benefits. A growing body of literature supports yoga's indication in chronic low back pain (CLBP) management. CLBP is a major public health concern, given its high rates of associated disabilities and large healthcare costs. A biopsychosocial approach has been deemed the most effective and appropriate management strategy for this condition. When alternative and comprehensive approaches for managing the complexity of CLBP are considered, yoga poses a safe, accessible adjunctive treatment option.

Objectives: The goal of this review is to demonstrate, by highlighting yoga's benefits on mental and physical health and the pathophysiology associated with CLBP, that yoga is an effective form of CLBP management. Our other goal is to establish that yoga encompasses a biopsychosocial approach to managing CLBP.

Study design and methods: After thorough examination of the available published literature, this narrative review evaluated 24 articles examining yoga's benefits to CLBP patients.

Results: CLBP is associated with high rates of anxiety, depression, chronic stress, and pain catastrophizing. Numerous studies support yoga as an effective intervention for depression, anxiety, chronic stress, and pain catastrophizing, given yoga's effects on the sympathetic nervous system, endocrine system, and various neurotransmitters and brain regions, and improvements in these areas may ameliorate the clinical symptoms experienced by CLBP patients. Physically, symptoms experienced by those with CLBP include pain, impaired function and mobility, disability, fatigue, and medication dependence, all of which, according to the literature, yoga has been shown to improve. Additionally, the chronicity and persistence of low back pain are related to central and peripheral sensitization, and yoga may intervene in these pathways to minimize symptom propagation.

Limitations: This review is not without limitations. The current literature lacks standardization regarding which yoga poses are safe, appropriate, and effective for CLBP patients, which limits the generalizability of yoga therapy. Additionally, few existing prospective trials study yoga in the management of CLBP. Though numerous randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are included in this review, most of the current literature details other reviews or analyses of RCTs, includes smaller sample sizes, and lacks long-term follow-up data. Furthermore, many of these studies include patients who have volunteered or self-selected to trial yoga therapy for their back pain, indicating inherent selection bias.

Conclusion: Overall, the current management strategies for CLBP do not encompass an effective biopsychosocial approach, and an intervention such as yoga is a promising adjunctive treatment for the condition.

瑜伽作为慢性腰背痛的辅助治疗方法:叙述性综述。
背景介绍瑜伽对身心健康的诸多益处已得到公认。越来越多的文献支持瑜伽用于慢性腰背痛(CLBP)的治疗。慢性腰背痛是一个重大的公共卫生问题,因为它导致的残疾率很高,医疗费用也很高。生物心理社会方法被认为是治疗这种疾病最有效、最合适的策略。如果考虑采用替代性综合方法来管理慢性前列腺炎的复杂性,瑜伽则是一种安全、方便的辅助治疗选择:本综述的目的是通过强调瑜伽对身心健康的益处以及与慢性前列腺炎相关的病理生理学,证明瑜伽是一种有效的慢性前列腺炎治疗方法。我们的另一个目标是确定瑜伽包含一种管理慢性脑卒中的生物心理社会方法:研究设计和方法:在对已发表的文献进行彻底研究后,本叙述性综述评估了 24 篇研究瑜伽对慢性脑脊髓膜炎患者益处的文章:CLBP与高发的焦虑、抑郁、慢性压力和疼痛灾难化有关。鉴于瑜伽对交感神经系统、内分泌系统、各种神经递质和大脑区域的影响,许多研究都支持将瑜伽作为治疗抑郁、焦虑、慢性压力和疼痛灾难化的有效干预措施,这些方面的改善可能会减轻慢性脑卒中患者的临床症状。在身体方面,慢性前列腺炎患者的症状包括疼痛、功能和活动能力受损、残疾、疲劳和药物依赖,而根据文献资料,瑜伽可以改善所有这些症状。此外,腰背痛的慢性化和持续性与中枢和外周的敏感性有关,而瑜伽可以干预这些途径,最大限度地减少症状的传播:本综述并非没有局限性。目前的文献缺乏关于哪些瑜伽姿势对慢性腰痛患者是安全、合适和有效的标准,这限制了瑜伽疗法的推广性。此外,现有的前瞻性试验中很少有研究瑜伽治疗慢性脑卒中的。虽然本综述中包含了大量随机对照试验(RCT),但目前大多数文献都详细介绍了其他综述或对 RCT 的分析,包括较小的样本量,并且缺乏长期随访数据。此外,这些研究中的许多研究对象都是自愿或自主选择试用瑜伽疗法治疗背部疼痛的患者,这表明存在固有的选择偏差:总体而言,目前针对慢性背痛症的治疗策略并不包括有效的生物心理社会方法,而瑜伽等干预方法是一种很有前景的辅助治疗方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Pain physician
Pain physician CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
21.60%
发文量
234
期刊介绍: Pain Physician Journal is the official publication of the American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians (ASIPP). The open access journal is published 6 times a year. Pain Physician Journal is a peer-reviewed, multi-disciplinary, open access journal written by and directed to an audience of interventional pain physicians, clinicians and basic scientists with an interest in interventional pain management and pain medicine. Pain Physician Journal presents the latest studies, research, and information vital to those in the emerging specialty of interventional pain management – and critical to the people they serve.
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