
The Prevalence Rate and the Role of the Spatial Extent of Pain in Nonspecific Chronic Back Pain—A Population‐Based Study in the South‐West of G ermany
Author(s) -
Gerhardt Andreas,
Hartmann Mechthild,
Blumenstiel Klaus,
Tesarz Jonas,
Eich Wolfgang
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
pain medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.893
H-Index - 97
eISSN - 1526-4637
pISSN - 1526-2375
DOI - 10.1111/pme.12286
Subject(s) - medicine , chronic pain , population , prevalence , pain medicine , physical therapy , anesthesia , environmental health , anesthesiology
Objective To determine the prevalence of chronic back pain in the general population and to establish an evidence‐based subclassification system for chronic back pain based on pain extent. Design Representative population‐based survey. Setting South‐western G ermany. Subjects Four‐thousand representative residents were contacted. The corrected response rate was 61.8% (N = 2,408). Those suffering from chronic back pain (pain ≥45 days/last 3 months) were invited to a clinical evaluation. Outcome Measures Chronic back pain, spatial extent of pain, sociodemographic and clinical variables.Results Age‐ and sex‐adjusted prevalence rate for chronic back pain was 17.7%. Analyzing pain extent, we found that only 19.6% suffered strictly from chronic local back pain, while the majority indicated additional pain regions. Thus, we developed a subclassification system based on pain extent that consists of four more homogeneous groups (19.6% strict chronic local pain, 42.1% chronic regional pain, 24.3% common chronic widespread pain, 13.9% extreme chronic widespread pain). Interestingly, in this system, increasing pain extent was significantly associated with higher distress, as reflected by sociodemographic (e.g., lower education, lower social class, and higher application rate for disability pension) and clinical variables (e.g., higher pain intensity, more pain medication, more consultations, higher impairment, and lower quality of life). Conclusions Chronic back pain is prevalent and usually involves additional pain areas outside of the back. This challenges the concept of chronic back pain as a distinct entity. To identify patients who are distressed by chronic back pain, a four‐class taxonomy based on pain drawings is both feasible and clinically useful.