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Trunk Muscle Coactivation in People with and without Low Back Pain during Fatiguing Frequency-Dependent Lifting Activities

Tiwana Varrecchia, Silvia Conforto, Alessandro Marco De Nunzio, Francesco Draicchio, Deborah Falla, Alberto Ranavolo

2022Sensors26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lifting tasks are manual material-handling activities and are commonly associated with work-related low back disorders. Instrument-based assessment tools are used to quantitatively assess the biomechanical risk associated with lifting activities. This study aims at highlighting different motor strategies in people with and without low back pain (LBP) during fatiguing frequency-dependent lifting tasks by using parameters of muscle coactivation. A total of 15 healthy controls (HC) and eight people with LBP performed three lifting tasks with a progressively increasing lifting index (LI), each lasting 15 min. Bilaterally erector spinae longissimus (ESL) activity and rectus abdominis superior (RAS) were recorded using bipolar surface electromyography systems (sEMG), and the time-varying multi-muscle coactivation function (TMCf) was computed. The TMCf can significantly discriminate each pair of LI and it is higher in LBP than HC. Collectively, our findings suggest that it is possible to identify different motor strategies between people with and without LBP. The main finding shows that LBP, to counteract pain, coactivates the trunk muscles more than HC, thereby adopting a strategy that is stiffer and more fatiguing.

Topics & Concepts

CoactivationElectromyographyLow back painPhysical medicine and rehabilitationTrunkBack musclesBack painPhysical therapyMedicineWork (physics)Muscle fatiguePsychologyEngineeringAlternative medicinePathologyMechanical engineeringEcologyBiologyMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitationErgonomics and Musculoskeletal DisordersMuscle activation and electromyography studies
Trunk Muscle Coactivation in People with and without Low Back Pain during Fatiguing Frequency-Dependent Lifting Activities | Litcius