The relationship between spinal pain and comorbidity: A cross-sectional analysis of 579 community-dwelling, older Australian women
journal contribution
posted on 2018-06-29, 00:00 authored by KE de Luca, Lynne Parkinson, S Haldeman, JE Byles, F BlythObjectives The aims of this study were to (1) report the prevalence and explore the influence of spinal pain on quality of life and (2) assess the relationship between spinal pain and the type and number of comorbidities. Methods This cross-sectional study comprised 579 community-dwelling, older Australian women. Women had “spinal pain” if they marked “yes” to neck pain, upper back pain, mid-back pain, and/or lower back pain. Descriptive statistics and binary logistic regression were performed to report the prevalence and explore the relationship between spinal pain and the type and number of comorbidities. Results A majority of women (55.8%) who returned surveys had spinal pain. Women with spinal pain had significantly lower physical and mental quality of life scores than women without spinal pain (Medical Outcomes Study: 36 Item Short Form Survey [SF-36] physical component summary: 40.1 ± 11.1 vs 49.0 ± 9.0, and SF-36 mental component summary: 50.0 ± 10.5 vs 53.9 ± 8.2, respectively). Having spinal pain was significantly associated with overweight and obesity (odds ratio 1.98 [95% confidence interval 1.3-2.96] and 2.12 [1.37-3.28]), diabetes (1.93 [1.01-3.67] ), pulmonary comorbidity (1.66 [1.04-2.65]), and cardiovascular comorbidity (1.57 [1.07-2.28] ). More than half of the women with spinal pain reported 2 or more comorbidities, with comorbidities significantly more common among women with spinal pain than among women without spinal pain. The odds of having spinal pain increased with an increasing number of comorbidities (2 comorbidities: 2.44 [1.47-4.04], 3 comorbidities: 3.07 [1.66-5.67] , 4 comorbidities: 5.05 [1.64-15.54]). Conclusions Spinal pain is common in community-dwelling, older Australian women and is associated with greater disability and poorer quality of life. Diabetes, cardiovascular disease, pulmonary disease, and obesity appear to have a relationship with spinal pain. There was an incremental increase in the risk of spinal pain associated with increasing comorbidity count. © 2017
Funding
Other
History
Volume
40Issue
7Start Page
459End Page
466Number of Pages
8eISSN
1532-6586ISSN
0161-4754Publisher
Mosby, USAPublisher DOI
Additional Rights
CC BY-NC-NDPeer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- Yes
Acceptance Date
2017-06-16External Author Affiliations
University of Sydney; University of California at Irvine; University of NewcastleEra Eligible
- Yes
Journal
Journal of Manipulative and Physiological TherapeuticsUsage metrics
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