PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

Relationship between low-back pain and flexibility in children: A cross-sectional study.

  • Tadashi Ito,
  • Hideshi Sugiura,
  • Yuji Ito,
  • Sho Narahara,
  • Kentaro Natsume,
  • Daiki Takahashi,
  • Koji Noritake,
  • Kazunori Yamazaki,
  • Yoshihito Sakai,
  • Nobuhiko Ochi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0293408
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 11
p. e0293408

Abstract

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Low-back pain is common among school-aged children. Decreased trunk flexibility in childhood influences low-back pain in adulthood. Previous studies examining the association between low-back pain and trunk flexibility in children are insufficient. Examining this association among elementary school children may help to better understand trunk flexibility in children with low-back pain and to modify the management of inflexibility. Therefore, this study aimed to identify the prevalence of low-back pain and its relationship with physical function among elementary school students. School-aged children aged 6-12 years were recruited in Japan between May 2018 and March 2023. Fingertip-to-floor distance, back muscle strength, pelvic tilt angle during gait, and the visual analog scale for low-back pain were measured. In addition, factors independently related to low-back pain were determined through logistic regression analysis. Low-back pain was reported in 9.6% of the 394 participants (boys, 191; girls, 203). All children with low-back pain presented with back pain when they moved; however, the pain was non-specific. Logistic regression analysis showed that the fingertip-to-floor distance was an independent risk factor for low-back pain (odds ratio, 0.921; p = 0.007). The odds ratios calculated in the logistic regression analysis confirmed that low-back pain frequency increased as the fingertip-to-floor distance decreased. The risk of low-back pain was associated with inflexibility, regardless of sex and muscle strength. These findings suggest that children with low-back pain must increase their trunk and lower extremity flexibility.