4.3 Article

The long-term effects of rally driving on spinal pathology

Journal

CLINICAL BIOMECHANICS
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages 83-86

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0268-0033(99)00047-9

Keywords

back pain; disc degeneration; disc herniation; driving; MRI; spine pathology; whole body vibration

Funding

  1. NIAMS NIH HHS [R01 AR40857-03] Funding Source: Medline

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Objectives. To investigate the consequences of rally driving on lumbar degenerative changes. Background. Vehicular driving is suspected to accelerate disc degeneration through whole-body vibration, leading to back problems. However, in an earlier well-controlled study of lumbar MRI findings in monozygotic twins, significant effects of lifetime driving on disc degeneration were not demonstrated. Another study of machine operators found only long-term exposure to vibration on unsprung seats led to a reduction in disc height. Design. Case-control study comparing rally drivers with population sample. Methods. Eighteen top rally drivers and co-drivers, mean age 43 yrs (SD, 10), volunteered for the study. The subjects were interviewed and imaged with a MR scanning and lumbar images were analyzed for degenerative findings using a standard scoring protocol previously published. The reference group was composed of 14 men, mean age 55 yrs (SD, 10), selected from a population sample. Results. Overall results showed no significant differences in lumbar degenerative findings as assessed from MR images between the rally drivers and the reference group; age-adjusted differences were not statistically significant for disc heights, bulges, herniations, end-plate irregularities, or osteophytes. Conclusion. Even extreme vehicular vibration as experienced in rally driving does not appear to have significant effects on disc generation.

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