4.6 Article

Ultrasound Imaging of Thoracolumbar Fascia Thickness: Chronic Non-Specific Lower Back Pain versus Healthy Subjects; A Sign of a Frozen Back?

Journal

DIAGNOSTICS
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics13081436

Keywords

fascia; thoracolumbar fascia; ultrasound examination; thickness; low back pain

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Recent studies have found an association between thoracolumbar fascia thickness and reduced gliding in patients with lower back pain. This study aimed to measure and compare the thickness of thoracolumbar fascia in chronic non-specific lower back pain patients and healthy individuals using ultrasound imaging. The results showed that lower back pain patients had a loss of anisotropy in the thoracolumbar fascia, with a homogeneous increase in thickness and a loss of adaptability in the transverse direction.
The thoracolumbar fascia (TLF) plays an important role in lower back pain (LBP). Recent studies have revealed an association between increases in TLF thickness and reduced TLF gliding in patients with LBP. The purpose of this study was to measure and compare by ultrasound (US) imaging the thickness of the TLF at the bilateral L3 level of the lumbar spine in the longitudinal and transverse axes in chronic non-specific LBP and in healthy subjects. A cross-sectional study was performed using US imaging to measure the longitudinal and transverse axes with a new protocol in a sample of 92 subjects: 46 chronic non-specific LBP patients and 46 healthy participants. The findings for TLF thickness revealed statistically significant differences (p < 0.05) in the longitudinal and transverse axes between the two groups. Moreover, in the healthy group, a statistically significant difference was found between the longitudinal and transverse axes (p = 0.001 for left and p = 0.02 for right), which was not evident in the LBP patients. These findings suggest that the LBP patients lost anisotropy of the TLF, with it becoming homogeneously thicker and losing adaptability in the transversal direction. The US imaging evaluation suggests that TLF thickness behavior points out altered fascial remodelling compared to healthy subjects, a sort of frozen back.

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