Efficacy of Core Stability in Non-Specific Chronic Low Back Pain
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
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- Articles published in English,
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- Study population aged between 18 years and 80 years,
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- Randomized controlled trial, meta-analysis, and systematic review on core stability in the management of non-specific chronic low back pain.
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- Acute and subacute LBP;
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- LBP with specific etiologies;
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- LBP in pregnant women, athletes, and military personnel.
3. Results
3.1. Effect of Core Stability on Short Duration (3–12 Months) and Long Duration (More Than 1 Year) cLBP
3.2. Progressive vs. Conventional Core Stability
3.3. Core Stability vs. Minimal or No Intervention
3.4. Core Stability vs. General Typical Strengthening and Stretching Training
3.5. Core Stability vs. Pilates, Cognitive Functional Treatment, or Proprioceptive Neuromuscular Facilitation
3.6. Core Stability vs. Treadmill Walking Exercise
3.7. Core Stability Using Training Device vs. on a Mat
3.8. Combination of Core Stability and Other Exercises
3.9. Core Stability Plus Other Classic Chronic Non-Specific LBP Treatments
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Article | Patient Characteristic, Sample Size, Sessions | GROUP A | GROUP B/C | Outcomes | Follow Up | Limits |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
18. Kumar et al., 2015; | Aged = 20–40; n = 30 3 days/week for 6 weeks; warm up, flexibility, and core muscle stability exercises | LBP more than 12 months | LBP between 3 and 12 months | Pain (NPRS), disability (ODI), back endurance (Sorensen test), lumbar flexibility (Modified-Modified Schober’s test), Gluteus Maximus strength (Jamar Hydraulic Hand Dynamometer) and activation of Transversus abdominis (pressure biofeedback unit) | 6 weeks | No control group; the flexibility and endurance also depend on the other factors like age, gender, weight, lumbar lordosis, etc. but it was not analyzed in present study; no long-term follow-up |
19. Chan et al., 2020; | Aged = 18–42; n = 30. 3 exercises, 3 sets, 10 repetitions with 5 s contraction hold | Progressive DMST core stability. Four stages which progressively increased in intensity on weekly basis | conventional MGB3 core stability. | Pain (NPRS), disability (RMDQ), trunk endurance (trunk flexion, trunk extension, lateral musculature), lumbopelvic control (Sahrmann 5-level core stability test), and body balance (Y-balance test) | 3 weeks, 6 weeks | No control group; does not exclude patients with a history of lower limb injuries; no long-term follow-up |
20. Paungmali et al., 2017; | Aged = 19–47 n = 25 Every participant performed 15 min of 3 different exercises in a randomized manner, with 48 h between sessions | Lumbopelvic core stabilization exercises in the supine crook lying position with the hip and knee in 70° and 90° of flexion, respectively. pressure biofeedback unit was inflated to 40 mmHg. | PLACEBO INTERVENTION = Automated passive cycling activity (30 rotations per minute) performed in the same supine crook lying position. CONTROLLED INTERVENTION = rest in the supine crook lying position | Pain (VAS), thermal pain threshold (thermal sensory analysis), pressure pain threshold (pressure algometer) | Post-intervention | The study considered only the immediate effects of LPST on pain; did not account for the different types of subgroups in chronic low back pain and several factors, such as sleep and psychosocial factors, that may influence sensory perception and sensory testing; subjective nature of the VAS pain tool |
21. Noormohammadpour et al., 2018; | Aged = 18–55 n = 36 8 weeks of training, two floor exercises and two exercises with a Swiss ball. Each exercise was performed for three sets (morning, mid-day, and night) with ten repetitions and a ten-second holding position in each repetition | Core stability exercises based on a progressive pattern over time | Control group was kept on a waiting list and did not receive any instruction about an exercise program | Pain (VAS), disability (RDQ), quality of life (SF-36), diameter of lateral abdominal muscles (US assessment) | 8 weeks | Small sample size; notable loss to follow-up; short duration of the intervention; All study participants were females; The ultrasonography assessment was only conducted in the hooklying position; the control group in our study received no intervention |
22. Abass et al., 2020; | Aged = 20–60 n = 40 3 days/week for 8 weeks; | Lumbar stabilization exercises (three phases) in addition to conventional therapy (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulator and infrared) | Conventional therapy (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulator and infrared) | Pain intensity (VAS), disability index (RODQ), kinesiophobia level (TSK questionnaire) and back muscle endurance (prone double straight-leg raise test) | 8 weeks | Lack of randomization in assigning participants into groups |
23. Cho et al., 2015; | Aged = 37–55 N = 30 3 times a week for 6 weeks | Lumbar stabilization exercise program consisting of stretching as a warm-up (5 min), lumbar stabilization exercises (30 min), and stretching as a cool-down (5 min). | Hot pack (20 min), interferential current therapy (15 min), and ultrasound (5 min) for 40 min per session | Disability (ODI), lumbar lordosis angles (plain radiography) | 6 weeks | Small sample size; short duration of intervention and follow up. |
24. Ko et al., 2018; | Aged = 30–40 N = 29 60 min, three times a week for 12 weeks. The program included 10 min of warm-up, 40 min of main exercise, and 10 min of cool-down. | INTERVENTION 1 = lumbar stabilization exercise group INTERVENTION 2 = sling exercise group | CONTROL GROUP | Pain (VAS), lumbosacral region angle (X-ray images of the lateral view of the lumbar region), lumbar muscle strength (isokinetic muscle strength analyzer) and flexibility (flexibility test) | 12 weeks | Small sample size; all study participants were females |
25. Alp et al., 2014; | Aged = 30–40 N = 48 6 weeks, 3 times/week, 60 min/day | Core stabilization exercise; warming (5 min), stretching (5 min), stabilization exercises for the multifidus/transversus abdominis muscles (30 min), and cooling (5 min), | Conventional exercise | Pain (VAS), disability (RDQ), quality of life (SF-36), abdominal and back endurance (Sorensen test and Kraus-Weber test), functional ability (timed sit to stand test). | 12 weeks | All study participants were females; short follow-up period |
26. Narouei et al., 2020; | Aged = 18–45 N = 32 5 days per week for 4 weeks | 16 core stabilization exercises | Control group (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation and a ‘hot-pack’) | Pain (VAS), disability (ODI), maximum bilateral activity of transversus abdominis, multifidus and gluteus maximus muscles (EMG), rest and contracted thickness of these muscles (US imaging) | 4 weeks | Short follow-up period, use of skin-surface electrodes instead of intramuscular fine wire electrodes |
27. Leonard et al., 2015. | Aged = 18–50 N = 25 The interventions were carried out by randomization with 48 h between the sessions | Lumbo-pelvic core stabilization training | PLACEBO TREATMENT = passive cycling CONTROLLED INTERVENTION = rest | Thickness of TrA at rest and during contraction (real time US) | Post-intervention | Small sample size; the study considered only the immediate effects of LPST on pain; |
28. Gong 2016. | Aged = 20–40 N = 30 | TRAINING GROUP = three sets of running in place in a limited area with abdominal drawing-in maneuvers each time, three times a week for six weeks | CONTROL GROUP = maintained daily living without any particular exercise | External obliquus abdominis, internal obliquus abdominis, transversus abdominis thicknesses (US imaging) | 6 weeks | Small sample size |
29. Paungmali et al., 2018. | Aged = 19–48 N = 24 All participants performed each type of exercise for approximately 15 min randomly with 48 h between sessions | Lumbar core stabilization exercise. Supine crook lying position with the hip and knee in 70° and 90° of flexion, respectively. Pressure biofeedback unit was inflated to 40 mmHg | PLACEBO TREATMENT = passive cycling in crook lying using automatic cycler) CONTROLLED INTERVENTION = positioning in crook lying and rest | Plasma β-endorphin and plasma cortisol (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and electrochemiluminescence) | Post-intervention | Did not directly investigate the changes in pain intensity in relationship to changes in the levels of PB and PC during LCSE; small sample size; not consider long-term follow-up of PB and PC levels. |
30. Paungmali et al., 2016 | Aged = 19–48 N = 25 All participants performed each type of exercise for approximately 15 min randomly with 48 h between sessions | Lumbopelvic stabilization training supine crook lying position with the hip and knee in 70° and 90° of flexion, respectively. pressure biofeedback unit was inflated to 40 mmHg | PLACEBO TREATMENT = passive cycling in crook lying using automatic cycler) CONTROLLED INTERVENTION = positioning in crook lying and rest | Lumbopelvic stability (pressure biofeedback device), tissue blood flow (laser Doppler flow meter) | Post-intervention | The study considered only the immediate effects of LPST on tissue blood flow and lumbopelvic stability |
31. Wang et al., 2012; REVIEW | 5 RCT involving 414 participants (over 18 years of age) | Core stability exercise training | Control group (general exercise) | Pain intensity (VAS, NRS, Mcgill), disability (ODI, RDQ). | Relatively low quality data that had a high risk of bias, small sample size, numerous articles did not contain sufficient information for evaluating the quality and clinical relevance of the data | |
32. Akhtar et al., 2017. | Aged = 39–53 N = 120 40min/session, one time/week for 6 weeks. All the subjects were managed with the base line treatment of therapeutic ultrasound and TENS at lumbar spine | Core stabilization exercise | Routine physical therapy exercise | Pain (VAS) | 2 weeks, 4 weeks and 6 weeks | |
33. Akbari et al., 2008 | Aged = 36–44 N = 49 8 weeks, twice per week, 30 min per session | Core stabilization exercise | General exercise group | Lumbar multifidus and transversus abdominis muscles thickness (US imaging), pain (VAS) and activity limitation (Back Performance Scale). | 8 weeks | |
34. Waseem et al., 2019 | Aged = 39–53 N = 120 All the subjects were managed with the base line treatment of therapeutic ultrasound and TENS at lumbar spine | Core stabilization exercise | Routine physical therapy exercise | Disability (ODI) | 2 weeks, 4 weeks, 6 weeks | No proof of patients’ compliance with exercises performed at home; not accounted the type of job |
35. Andrusaitis et al., 2011 | Aged = 30–55 N = 15 40-minute physical therapy session three times a week for a total of 20 sessions. All the sessions began with a ten-minute warm-up on an ergometric bicycle | GROUP A = core stabilization exercise (stabilization exercises were taught, starting with the dorsal decubitus and progressing to the ventral decubitus, in seated, four-support, and standing positions. Increases in the number of exercises performed in each session (or load progression) occurred according to individual tolerance) | GROUP B = Core strengthening exercise (strengthening the abdominal, back, and hip muscles with an average of three series of ten repetitions of each exercise. Increases in the number of exercises performed in each session (or load progression) occurred according to individual tolerance) GROUP C = control | Pain (VAS), disability (ODI), balance tests (Balance Master® System) | 7 weeks | Small number of subjects and the differences in the duration of cLBP between the groups. |
36. França et al., 2010 | Aged = 34–50 N = 30 30min/session, twice/week, 6 weeks. | Core stabilization (exercises focused on the TrA and lumbar multifidus muscles) | Superficial strengthening (exercises focused on the rectus abdominis, abdominus obliquus internus, abdominus obliquus externus, and erector spinae) | Pain (VAS, McGill pain questionnaire), disability (ODI), and TrA muscle activation capacity (Pressure Biofeedback Unit). | 6 weeks | No intermediate and long-term follow up examinations. Biopsychosocial factors were not observed in this study. |
37. Gatti et al., 2011 | Aged = 45–71 N = 79 The intervention consisted of 2 sessions per week, each lasting 60 min (15 min of walking on a treadmill, 30 min of flexibility exercises and 15 min of trunk balance exercises or strengthening exercises for the limbs and trunk), for a total of 10 treatments over 5 consecutive weeks. | Trunk balance exercises in addition to trunk flexibility exercises | Strengthening exercises in addition to the same standard trunk flexibility exercises | Pain intensity (VAS), disability (RDQ), quality of life (SF-12), painful positions, use of analgesic drugs, and referred pain | 5 weeks | Lack of an a priori sample size analysis based on the primary outcomes. Absence of a follow-up beyond the termination of the intervention period. Placebo or Hawthorne effect cannot be excluded, as it was not possible to blind the patients to the intervention, |
38. Kwon et al., 2020 | Aged = 22–40 N = 30 3 times per week for 6 weeks | Lumbar stabilization exercises in different postures, | Ordinary trunk muscle strengthening exercise | Pain intensity (VAS), transversus abdominis activation capacity (pressure biofeedback unit), transversus abdominis thickness (US imaging) and disability(K-ODI). | 6 weeks | Small sample size; not accounted multifidus and pelvic floor muscles |
39. Sipaviciene et al., 2020 | Aged = 32–44 N = 70 20-week exercise programs | Lumbar stabilization exercise program. strengthen the deep trunk stabilizing muscles (especially transverse abdominal, internal oblique and lumbar multifidus) and control pelvic muscles. 8–16 repetitions of all exercises | Lumbar muscle strengthening exercise program. exercises that improve trunk flexor (rectus abdominis) and extensor (erector spinae) muscles strength. 8–16 repetitions of all exercises | Pain (VAS), disability (ODI), cross-sectional area of the multifidus muscle (US imaging), isokinetic peak torque (isokinetic dynamometer) | 20 weeks, 24 weeks, 28 weeks, 32 weeks | Do not investigate the long-term effects of a lumbar stabilization exercise program |
40. Inani et al., 2013 | Aged = 20–50 N = 30 12 week exercise program | Core stabilization exercises (4 phases) | Conventional exercises | Pain (VAS), disability (modified ODI), | 3 months | Small sample size, empirical verification of transversus abdominis and multifidus muscle contraction and recruitment |
41. Bhadauria et al., 2017 | Aged = 20–47 N = 44 Ten sessions of exercises for 3 weeks were prescribed along with interferential current and hot moist pack.Warm up stretching exercises for 10 min before the main exercises and cool down exercises for 5 min after each session. | GROUP A: lumbar stabilization group (16 lumbar stabilization exercises) | GROUP B: dynamic strengthening group (14 exercises, which activated the extensor (erector spinae) and flexor (rectus abdominis) muscle groups GROUP C: Pilates group | Pain (VAS), disability (ODI), range of motion-lumbar flexion and extension (modified Schober test) and core strength (pressure biofeedback unit) | 3 weeks | Small sample size. Only ten exercise sessions. |
42. Moon et al., 2013 | Aged = 23–33 N = 21 Exercises were performed for 1 h, twice weekly, for 8 weeks | Lumbar stabilization exercise group | Lumbar dynamic strengthening exercise group | Pain (VAS), disability (ODI), strength of the lumbar extensors (Using MedX) | 8 weeks | Small sample size, young age, short follow-up period |
43. Shamsi et al., 2016 | Aged = 20–60 N = 43 16 sessions program, 3 times/week Warm up 5 min, The pure exercise time for core stability group was 20 min and for general exercises was 14 min in each session | Core stability exercises | General exercises | Pain (VAS), disability (ODI), Endurance core stability tests (trunk flexor; (2) trunk extensor; and (3) side bridge tests) | 5 weeks | The study design was a quasi-randomized controlled trial. The mean age was higher in the GE than the CSE group. Short follow up period |
44. Shamsi et al., 2020 | Aged = 20–60 N = 56 16 sessions program, 3 times/weekWarm up (8 stretching exercises and stationary cycling for 5 min), The pure exercise time for core stability group was 20 min and for general exercises was 14 min in each session | Core stability exercises | General exercises | Pain (VAS), disability (ODI), trunk muscle activation patterns (EMG) | 5 weeks | Lack of a true control group, lack of blindness for the treating physiotherapist, quasi-randomized trial design. |
45. Nabavi et al., 2018. | Aged = 20–50 N = 41 1-h treatment, 3 times/week for 4 weeks. Both groups received routine physiotherapy including electrotherapy and warmup exercises | Core stability exercises | General exercises | Pain (VAS), muscle dimensions of transverse abdominis and lumbar multifidus muscles (US imaging) | 4 weeks | No long-term follow up, lack of blindness for the treating physiotherapist |
46. França et al., 2012 | Aged = 30–50 N = 30 6 weeks, twice per week, lasting 30 min each | Segmental stabilization exercises (exercises focused on the TrA and LM muscles according to the protocol proposed by Richardson) | Stretching of trunk and hamstrings muscles (stretching of erector spinae, hamstring, and triceps surae muscles and connective tissues posterior to column) | Pain (VAS and McGill pain questionnaire), disability (ODI) and TrA muscle activation (Pressure Biofeedback Unit) | 6 weeks | Lack of a true control group (no treatment), no long-term follow up, small sample size. A more specific analysis of the LM and TrA muscles using ultrasound imaging or electromyography was not performed. |
47. Stankovic et al., 2012 | Aged = 40–60 N = 160 20 therapeutic treatments, for 4 weeks (5 days per week). Each treatment lasted 30 min. | Lumbar stabilization exercises (15 exercises) | Strengthening and stretching of the large, superficial back muscles | Pain (VAS), Disability (ODI), quality of life (SF-36) | 4 weeks | Subjective tests |
48. Akodu et al., 2016 | Aged = 35–60 N = 29 twice weekly for 4 consecutive weeks. | GROUP 1: core stabilization exercise + infra-red radiation, | GROUP 2: Pilates exercise + infra- red radiation GROUP 3: infra-red radiation and back care education | Pain (NRS), disability (RMDQ), lumbar range of motion (MST), level of physical activity (IPAQ) | 2 weeks, 4 weeks | |
49. Khodadad et al., 2020 | Aged = 40–45 N = 52 60 min session, 3 days per week, for 8 weeks. warm-up stretching exercises for 10 min before the main exercises, and cool-down exercises for 10 min after each session | Lumbar stabilization treatment (Five exercises that activate the deep lumbar stabilizing muscles: the transversus abdominis, lumbar multifidi, and internal obliques) | Cognitive functional treatment | Pain (VAS), lumbar movement control (Luomajoki LMC battery tests) | 8 weeks | Small sample size, only male adults aged 40–50 years patients. lack of blindness for the treating physiotherapist, short follow-up period. |
50. Areeudomwong et al. | Aged = 18–50 N = 45 three weekly 30 min sessions over four weeks | GROUP 1 = core stabilization exercise | GROUP 2 = proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation CONTROL GROUP (5 min to 10 min of therapeutic ultrasound depending on treatment area, 20-min general trunk strengthening exercise program was performed in three sets of 10 repetitions, with a 30 s rest between repetitions and 60 s rest between sets) | Pain (NRS), disability (RMDQ), patient satisfaction superficial and deep trunk muscle activity (EMG) | 4 weeks, 3 months | Only investigated effects on pain and electromyographic activity of trunk muscles; short term follow-up |
51. Bello et al., 2018 | Aged = 30–50 N = 50 three times a week for 8 weeks | Lumbar stabilization exercises following the McGill protocol (30 min of stabilization exercises per session) | Modified Bruce treadmill walking protocol | Pain (VAS), functional disability (ODI) and multifidus muscle activation (surface EMG) | 8 weeks | Use of skin-surface electrodes instead of intramuscular fine wire electrodes. Unable to measure EMG activity of the multifidus during dynamic activity (movement) |
52. Kang et al., 2018 | Aged = 30–50 N = 2430 min/session, 5 times/week for 6 weeks 10-min hot pack treatment, 15-min electrotherapy and 5-min ultrasonic treatment before the lumbar stabilization exercise | Lumbar stabilization exercises performed on unstable surface | Lumbar stabilization exercises performed on stable surface | Pain (VAS), disability (ODI), Back muscle strength (digital back muscle strength meter), proprioception and lumbar spine stability (SBST), depression (BDI) | 6 weeks | Patients are adults with CLBP working in an automobile assembly plant (they are not a representative sample of all patients). Not measured muscle activation level or strength of specific muscle. It is not possible to determine which exercise specifically improved certain dependent variables. |
53. Chung et al., 2018 | Aged = 25–40 N = 27 30 min/day, 3 times a week, for 6 weeks. warm up for 5 min and cool down for 5 min | Lumbar stabilization exercises using flexi-bar | Stabilization exercises | Pain (VAS), disability (ODI), TrA activation capacity (pressure biofeedback unit) and thickness (US imaging) | 6 weeks | Lack of blindness for the therapist and patients. Small sample size, short follow-up period. TrA activation capacity and thickness in dynamic conditions was not measured |
54. Chung et al., 2018 | Aged = 25–45 N = 24 Warm up and cool-down: walking for 10 min each on a treadmill.three times/week, 8 weeks, using four different motions | Stabilization exercise program using balls | Stabilization exercise program (same motions on a mat) | Pain (VAS), disability (ODI), Multifidus muscle cross-sectional areas (TC), left and right weight bearing differences (Tetrax balancing scale) | 8 weeks | Small sample size, relatively short intervention period (eight weeks), stability in dynamic conditions was not measured. |
55. Yoo et al., 2012 | Aged = 19–21 N = 30 3 times/week, 4 weeks | Core Stabilization Exercises Using a Sling (6 movements. Each action was maintained for 20 s followed by 10 s rest. 3 sets, 6 repetitions/set with 90 s rest between sets) | Core Stabilization Exercises on a mat (8 movements. Each action was maintained for 10 s followed by 10 s rest. 2 repetitions/sets, 2 sets with 15 s rest between sets) | Pain (VAS), extensor muscle strength (tergumed device) | 4 weeks | Quality of life and disability are not accounted, small sample size, short-term follow up |
56. Bae et al., 2018 | Aged = 20–45 N = 36 30 min/session. Standard trainings such as warm-up, cool-down, and stretching were conducted both before and after the exercise program with the same method. 12 sessions of the exercise program, 4 weeks. | Assisted sit-up exercise with a training device (HubEX-LEX®) | Conventional core stabilization exercise | Pain (VAS), disability (ODI), abdominal muscle thickness (US imaging) and activity of core muscles (surface EMG) | 4 weeks, 8 weeks, 16 weeks | Absence of evaluation for dorsal paraspinal muscles. Small sample size. Young age. |
58. Mohan et al., 2020. | Aged = 20–45 N = 40 3 times/week, 8 weeks | Core stability with a combined ball and balloon exercise with routine physiotherapy (ultrasound, spinal flexion or extension exercises) | Routine physiotherapy (ultrasound, spinal flexion or extension exercises) | Maximum inspiratory pressure, maximum expiratory pressure, maximum voluntary ventilation (spirometer). pain (NRS), faulty breathing pattern (total faulty breathing scale), chest expansion (cloth tape measure) and lumbo-pelvic stability (pressure biofeedback device) | 8 weeks | Lack of appropriate training and understanding among the participants who performed MVV maneuvers. Did not account for psychological issues which might affect respiration. there were no normative values for the variables tested in this study to compare with those in NS-LBP patients |
59. Oh et al., 2020 | Aged = 40–49 N = 44 50 min per session, 3 sessions per week for 4 weeks 5 min of stretching to warm up and cool down was performed, and 3–5 sets with each lasting for 20 s were performed for each exercise program. Between the sets, a 1-min break was allowed | Abdominal draw-in with a lumbar stabilization exercise program and respiratory resistance exercise (expand-A-Lung®) | Abdominal draw-in with a lumbar stabilization exercise program | Pain (QVAS), disability (ODI-K), diaphragm thickness, and contraction rate (US imaging), and lung capacity test (Microquark) | 4 weeks | Hand pressure and direction of the ultrasonic probe was not the same during the measurement. Participants were all females ages 40–49 years. The abdominal contraction ability or maximal inspiratory pressure and maximal expiratory pressure were not assessed, the participants were patients admitted to a hospital, making it difficult to control the social participation, physical activity, and medical treatments, the psychological characteristics of the outcome measures could not be assessed. |
60. Finta et al., 2018 | Aged = 18–25 N = 47 8-weeks, 2 session/week, 60 min/session 10 min warm up, 40 min circuit training with five sections, and with 3 min of exercising in one section and 1 min breaks between the sections, 10 min cool down | Complex training program with diaphragm training (POWER breathe Medic Plus device twice a day at home, 30 inhalations per occasion, and with the speed of 15 inhalations/min and during strengthening exercises) | Complex training program | Pain (VAS) transversus abdominis, diaphragm, and lumbar multifidus muscle thickness (US imaging) | 8 weeks | It is not possible discriminate between the increase of muscle thickness as a result of the changes of the tone and activation pattern and muscle hypertrophy, possible different compliance of the subjects. Possibility of different levels of contraction during US measurement |
61. Kavya et al., 2020 | Aged = 20–50 N = 36 3 weeks All the three groups received moist heat application for 10 min | Group A = inspiratory training with lumbar stabilization (5 min inspiratory training and 25 min lumbar stabilization exercise/session), group B = expiratory training with lumbar stabilization (5 min expiratory training and 25 min lumbar stabilization exercise/session) | Group C = lumbar stabilization exercise (25 min/session) | Pain (VAS), disability (ODI), core strength (pressure biofeedback unit) | 3 weeks | Small sample size, no long term follow up |
63. Jeong et al., 2015 | Aged = 30–50 N = 40 6 weeks, Three times/week, 50 min/session | Lumbar segmental stabilization exercise plus exercise to strengthen the muscles of the gluteus group | Lumbar segmental stabilization exercise group | Disability (ODI), lumbar isometric strength (M3 (Schnell, Germany) isometric muscle strength measurement equipment) | 6 weeks | Small sample size, physical activities, and environmental factors other than exercise were not completely controlled |
64. You et al., 2013 | Aged = 40–60 N = 40 8 weeks, three days/week | Drawing in the abdominal wall (hook-lying posture for 20 s × 10 sets, 60-s rest between the practice sessions, and three repetitions) plus ankle dorsiflexion (30% of maximal voluntary isometric contraction of the tibialis anterior muscle against resistance provided by elastic band for 20 s × 10 sets, a 60-s rest between the practice sessions, and three repetitions) | Drawing in the abdominal wall (hook-lying posture for 20 s × 10 sets, 60-s rest between the practice sessions, and three repetitions) | Pain (VAS, Pain Disability Index, Pain Rating Scale), Disability (ODI, RMDQ), core stability test (active straight leg raise) | 8 weeks, 16 weeks | Small sample size |
65. Luz et al., 2019 | Aged = 18–35 N = 30 4 weeks, 3 session/week | GROUP A = CORE stability (4 exercises/session, in each exercise the posture was maintained for 10 s. 10 rep, 20-s intervals between each series and one-minute intervals between each exercise) plus NMES program addressing gluteus maximus, gluteus medius, rectus abdominis, and bilateral transverse abdominis (warm up- 5 Hz for five minutes. Then, Frequency of 35 Hz for 10 min and, finally, 80 Hz for another 10 min. The stimulus intensity was the maximum needed to produce a strong, visible muscular contraction without causing discomfort to the patient.) | GROUP B = core stability (four exercises per session, and in each exercise the posture was maintained for 10 s. Ten repetitions were performed with 20-s intervals between each series and one-minute intervals between each exercise) GROUP C = NMES group (warm up- 5 Hz for five minutes. Then, Frequency of 35 Hz for 10 min and, finally, 80 Hz for another 10 min. The stimulus intensity was the maximum needed to produce a strong, visible muscular contraction without causing discomfort to the patient.) | Pain (VAS), Disability (ODI, RDQ), hamstring flexibility (hamstring flexibility test- wells’ bench), evaluation of core stabilizing muscles (static trunk endurance, Sorenson Endurance, Side Bridge, and Prone Instability) | 4 weeks | Small sample size, only female patients, short-term intervention and follow up, no control group, participants’ intake of analgesic drugs was not evaluated or controlled |
66. Yang et al., 2015 | Aged = 35–55 N = 20 12 weeks, 3 sessions/week, 1 h/dailyWarm up- 15 min walking on a treadmill Cool down- 3 stretching exercises | Stabilization exercises (active stabilization exercises- 9 exercises, 15 rep/set for 3 set) plus Thoracic mobilization therapy (manipulation therapy, reported by Kaltenborn, five minutes before starting the stabilization exercises) | Stabilization exercises | Range of motion of the spine (Spinal Mouse) isometric muscular strength of the lumbar deep muscles (isometric sthenometer, ISO-check) | 12 weeks | |
67. Ozsoy et al., 2019 | Aged = 65–70 N = 45 3 days/week, 6 weeks | Core stabilization exercises ((60 min/session, starting with a 10-min warm-up program and ending with a 5-min cool-down. Exercises were designed from 1 set to 3 sets, from 8 to 15 repetitions and contractions from 5 s to 10 s. Rest intervals were set as 30 s between the sets and 2–3 min between the exercises) plus Myofascial Release Technique with a roller massager (3 sets (1 min rest between sets) lasting for 30 s for each myofascial track) | Core stabilization exercises (60 min/session, starting with a 10-min warm-up program and ending with a 5-min cool-down. Exercises were designed from 1 set to 3 sets, from 8 to 15 repetitions and contractions from 5 s to 10 s. Rest intervals were set as 30 s between the sets and 2–3 min between the exercises) | Pain (VAS, pain pressure threshold), low back disability (ODI), lower body flexibility (chair sit and reach test), kinesiophobia (tampa scale of kinesiophobia), core stability endurance (supine bridge test), spinal mobility (Spinal Mouse System), gait characteristics (Biodex Gait Trainer 2) and quality of life (WHOQOL-OLD) | 6 weeks | Myofascial relaxation technique was performed with a roller massager, but many other methods also exist. Absence of Myofascial Release Technique alone group. |
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Frizziero, A.; Pellizzon, G.; Vittadini, F.; Bigliardi, D.; Costantino, C. Efficacy of Core Stability in Non-Specific Chronic Low Back Pain. J. Funct. Morphol. Kinesiol. 2021, 6, 37. https://doi.org/10.3390/jfmk6020037
Frizziero A, Pellizzon G, Vittadini F, Bigliardi D, Costantino C. Efficacy of Core Stability in Non-Specific Chronic Low Back Pain. Journal of Functional Morphology and Kinesiology. 2021; 6(2):37. https://doi.org/10.3390/jfmk6020037
Chicago/Turabian StyleFrizziero, Antonio, Giacomo Pellizzon, Filippo Vittadini, Davide Bigliardi, and Cosimo Costantino. 2021. "Efficacy of Core Stability in Non-Specific Chronic Low Back Pain" Journal of Functional Morphology and Kinesiology 6, no. 2: 37. https://doi.org/10.3390/jfmk6020037
APA StyleFrizziero, A., Pellizzon, G., Vittadini, F., Bigliardi, D., & Costantino, C. (2021). Efficacy of Core Stability in Non-Specific Chronic Low Back Pain. Journal of Functional Morphology and Kinesiology, 6(2), 37. https://doi.org/10.3390/jfmk6020037