Cardiovascular risk factors and low-back pain in a long-term follow-up of industrial employees.

OBJECTIVES Atherosclerosis of the lumbar vessels has been suggested as a mechanism leading to low-back pain (LBP). We studied whether seven cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors predict LBP. METHODS A sample (N=902) stratified by gender, age, and occupational class was drawn from employees in an engineering company in 1973 and examined for body mass index (BMI), smoking, exercise, serum total cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations, systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), and LBP. By November 2000, 232 persons had died, 108 from cardiovascular causes. In 2000, 546 (81% of the survivors) responded to a follow-up questionnaire on, for example, LBP. RESULTS Among the men, frequent local LBP at follow-up was predicted by high triglyceride and DBP levels and being a past smoker at baseline, adjusted for age, occupational class and frequent local LBP at baseline. In analogous models, high triglyceride and SBP levels and smoking (past and current) predicted frequent radiating LBP. An increased LBP score was predicted by a high BMI, serum total cholesterol, triglyceride, SBP and DBP levels, and smoking status at baseline. When BMI was allowed for, the associations between triglyceride level and all LBP outcomes persisted, as well as the association between SBP and frequent radiating LBP and an increased LBP score. An overall score of CVD risk factors showed a graded association with increased LBP. Among the women, a high BMI predicted frequent local and radiating LBP, and smoking at baseline predicted frequent radiating LBP and an increased LBP score. CONCLUSIONS The study adds to the evidence supporting the atherosclerosis-LBP hypothesis particularly for men.

[1]  R. Luukkonen,et al.  Low Back Pain, Work Absenteeism, Chronic Back Disorders, and Clinical Findings in the Low Back as Predictors of Hospitalization due to Low Back Disorders: A 28-Year Follow-up of Industrial Employees , 2005, Spine.

[2]  François Mach,et al.  Inflammation and Atherosclerosis , 2004, Herz.

[3]  R. Mikkonen,et al.  MR Aortography and Serum Cholesterol Levels in Patients With Long-Term Nonspecific Lower Back Pain , 2004, Spine.

[4]  A. Nissinen,et al.  Effects of lifestyle intervention on neck, shoulder, elbow and wrist symptoms. , 2004, Scandinavian journal of work, environment & health.

[5]  J. Ambrose,et al.  The pathophysiology of cigarette smoking and cardiovascular disease: an update. , 2004, Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

[6]  P. Leino-Arjas,et al.  Possible association of interleukin 1 gene locus polymorphisms with low back pain , 2004, Pain.

[7]  J. Jinkins Acquired degenerative changes of the intervertebral segments at and suprajacent to the lumbosacral junction. A radioanatomic analysis of the nondiscal structures of the spinal column and perispinal soft tissues. , 2004, European journal of radiology.

[8]  R. Luukkonen,et al.  Smoking and Overweight as Predictors of Hospitalization for Back Disorders , 2003, Spine.

[9]  Chris G Maher,et al.  Acute low back pain: systematic review of its prognosis , 2003, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[10]  Fernando Costa,et al.  Exercise and physical activity in the prevention and treatment of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease: a statement from the Council on Clinical Cardiology (Subcommittee on Exercise, Rehabilitation, and Prevention) and the Council on Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Metabolism (Subcommittee on Ph , 2003, Circulation.

[11]  D. Grobbee,et al.  A Relation Between Blood Pressure and Stiffness of Joints and Skin , 2003, Epidemiology.

[12]  S. Bruehl,et al.  The relationship between resting blood pressure and acute pain sensitivity in healthy normotensives and chronic back pain sufferers: the effects of opioid blockade , 2002, Pain.

[13]  Ritva Luukkonen,et al.  Work stress and risk of cardiovascular mortality: prospective cohort study of industrial employees , 2002, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[14]  Harold Alan Pincus,et al.  The most expensive medical conditions in America. , 2002, Health affairs.

[15]  H. Matsuzaki,et al.  Mechanism of Intervertebral Disc Degeneration Caused by Nicotine in Rabbits to Explicate Intervertebral Disc Disorders Caused by Smoking , 2002, Spine.

[16]  Linda R Watkins,et al.  Beyond neurons: evidence that immune and glial cells contribute to pathological pain states. , 2002, Physiological reviews.

[17]  W. E. Hoogendoorn,et al.  Systematic Review of Psychosocial Factors at Work and Private Life as Risk Factors for Back Pain , 2000, Spine.

[18]  B. Walker,et al.  The prevalence of low back pain: a systematic review of the literature from 1966 to 1998. , 2000, Journal of spinal disorders.

[19]  N. Mayo,et al.  A Review of the Association Between Cigarette Smoking and the Development of Nonspecific Back Pain and Related Outcomes , 2000, Spine.

[20]  T. Cole,et al.  Back pain and obesity in the 1958 British birth cohort. cause or effect? , 2000, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[21]  C. Leboeuf‐Yde Body Weight and Low Back Pain: A Systematic Literature Review of 56 Journal Articles Reporting on 65 Epidemiologic Studies , 2000, Spine.

[22]  J Dul,et al.  The relationship between leisure time, physical activities and musculoskeletal symptoms and disability in worker populations , 2000, International archives of occupational and environmental health.

[23]  P. Ridker,et al.  Survey of C-reactive protein and cardiovascular risk factors in apparently healthy men. , 1999, The American journal of cardiology.

[24]  O. Tervonen,et al.  Association of atherosclerosis with low back pain and the degree of disc degeneration. , 1999, Spine.

[25]  R Kadefors,et al.  Psychophysiological stress responses, muscle tension, and neck and shoulder pain among supermarket cashiers. , 1999, Journal of occupational health psychology.

[26]  M. Marmot,et al.  Are risk factors for atherothrombotic disease associated with back pain sickness absence? The Whitehall II Study. , 1999, Journal of epidemiology and community health.

[27]  L. Kuller,et al.  Lifetime smoking exposure affects the association of C-reactive protein with cardiovascular disease risk factors and subclinical disease in healthy elderly subjects. , 1997, Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology.

[28]  D. Kiel,et al.  Disc Degeneration/Back Pain and Calcification of the Abdominal Aorta: A 25‐Year Follow‐Up Study in Framingham , 1997, Spine.

[29]  T. Kakiuchi,et al.  Inflammatory Cytokines in the Herniated Disc of the Lumbar Spine , 1996, Spine.

[30]  L. Kauppila Can low-back pain be due to lumbar-artery disease? , 1995, The Lancet.

[31]  P. Leino Does leisure time physical activity prevent low back disorders? A prospective study of metal industry employees. , 1993, Spine.

[32]  Stanisław Wanat RESEARCH INSTITUTE OF PHYSICAL CULTURE AND HEALTH, No. 24 Jyväskylä 1979, p. 94. Finland , 1981 .

[33]  L. Welin,et al.  Serum lipids, lipoproteins and musculoskeletal disorders among 50- and 60-year-old men. An epidemiologic study. , 1978, Scandinavian journal of rheumatology.