# Trunk Laterality Judgement in Chronic Low Back Pain: Influence of Low Back Pain History, Task Complexity, and Clinical Correlates

**Authors:** Thomas Matheve, Lotte Janssens, Annick Timmermans, Nina Goossens, Lieven Danneels, Hannes Meirezonne, Michiel Brandt, Liesbet De Baets

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm14155328 · 2025-07-28

## TL;DR

Chronic low back pain patients are slower and less accurate in trunk laterality judgment tasks compared to those without a history of back pain.

## Contribution

This study identifies that LRD-performance in CLBP patients is impaired compared to pain-free individuals without LBP history.

## Key findings

- CLBP patients were significantly slower and less accurate in LRD tasks than pain-free individuals without LBP history.
- Clinical parameters like pain intensity and disability were not related to LRD-performance in CLBP patients after controlling for demographics.
- LRD-performance differences were not influenced by task complexity.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: Left/right discrimination (LRD) training is increasingly being used in the treatment of chronic low back pain (CLBP). However, it is unclear whether trunk LRD-performance is impaired in CLBP patients and whether clinical parameters are related to LRD-performance. Therefore, this cross-sectional study aimed to examine (1) whether LRD-performance differs between CLBP patients and pain-free individuals; (2) whether these differences depend on the low back pain (LBP) history in pain-free individuals; (3) if clinical factors are related to LRD-performance; (4) whether LRD-task difficulty influences these results. Methods: Participants included 150 pain-free persons (107 with no LBP-history; 43 with past LBP) and 150 patients with CLBP. All participants performed the LRD-task in a simple and complex condition. Outcomes were reaction time and accuracy. Results: CLBP patients were significantly slower (Cohen’s d = 0.47 to 0.50, p < 0.001) and less accurate (Cohen’s d = 0.30 to 0.55, p < 0.001) than pain-free individuals without LBP-history, but not compared to those with past LBP (Cohen’s d reaction time = 0.07 to 0.15, p = 0.55; Cohen’s d accuracy = 0.03 to 0.28, p-value = 0.28). All participant groups were slower and less accurate in the complex condition, but between-groups differences were independent of task difficulty. Linear mixed models showed that older age and lower education were independently associated with less accuracy. When controlling for demographics, pain intensity, disability, fear of movement, pain-related worry and pain duration were not related to LRD-performance in patients with CLBP. Conclusions: Patients with CLBP showed impaired trunk LRD-performance compared to pain-free persons without LBP history, but not compared to those with past LBP. When controlling for demographics, clinical parameters were not related to LRD-performance in patients with CLBP. Our findings indicate that LRD-performance may remain impaired after recovering from LBP.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** CLBP (MESH:D017116), pain (MESH:D010146), fear of (MESH:C000719212), disability (MESH:D009069)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12347674/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12347674