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Return to play after conservative treatment in athletes with symptomatic lumbar disc herniation: a practice-based observational study
Original Research
(1468) Views (987) Full article downloads
Authors: Jun Iwamoto, Yoshihiro Sato, Tsuyoshi Takeda, et al
Published Date March 2011
Volume 2011:2 Pages 25 - 31
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/OAJSM.S17523
Jun Iwamoto1, Yoshihiro Sato2, Tsuyoshi Takeda1, Hideo Matsumoto11Institute for Integrated Sports Medicine, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan; 2Department of Neurology, Mitate Hospital, Fukuoka, Japan
Abstract: The purpose of the study was to confirm the short-term outcome of conservative treatment in terms of the ability to return to play and factors influencing return to play in athletes with symptomatic lumbar disc herniation. A total of 100 consecutive athletes (72 male and 28 female) who consulted our sports medicine clinic during the 16-year period between September 1993 and October 2009 because of severe low back pain and/or leg pain/numbness due to lumbar disc herniation were studied. The mean age of the subjects was 23 years. All of them were conservatively treated by being advised to discontinue their sporting activities with/without short-term medication. After the subjective symptoms had reduced by more than 80%, individual training was started in order to allow the athletes to return to play. Seventy-nine athletes (79.0%) returned to play at an average of 4.8 months (range 1–12 months) after the start of treatment and were able to sustain the activities for at least 6 months, the minimum duration of follow-up in the study. The outcome of the conservative treatment was not influenced by the intensity of the sporting activity. Multiple logistic regression analyses showed that the severity of the symptoms prior to the start of treatment was the factor influencing the ability of the athletes to return to play. The present study confirmed the satisfactory short-term outcome of conservative treatment in athletes with symptomatic lumbar disc herniation regarding return to play and revealed that subjective symptoms prior to the start of treatment appeared to be a key factor in return to play after conservative treatment.
Keywords: lumbar disc herniation, athletes, return to play, conservative treatment, sciatica, low back pain
Other articles by Dr Jun Iwamoto
Rat model of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis created by methionine and choline deficiency: biochemical and histological analyses
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Experience with alendronate treatment for four years among Japanese men with osteoporosis or osteopenia and clinical risk factors for fractures
Five-year alendronate treatment outcome in older postmenopausal Japanese women with osteoporosis or osteopenia and clinical risk factors for fractures
Hip fracture protection by alendronate treatment in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis: a review of the literature
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