Association Between Systemic Symptoms and Recovery in Acute Low Back Pain: A Retrospective Cross-Sectional Study
Ji-Ho Lee, Si-Hyun Han, Min-Su Kim, Dong-Ho Keum, Seo-Hyun Park

TL;DR
This study explores how systemic symptoms like dyspepsia affect recovery in acute low back pain, suggesting they could predict chronicity.
Contribution
The study identifies systemic symptoms as novel prognostic factors for acute low back pain recovery.
Findings
Dyspepsia is significantly linked to higher pain at discharge and less pain reduction in ALBP patients.
Alcohol consumption is associated with lower pain at discharge and greater pain improvement.
Systemic symptoms may serve as early markers for predicting chronic low back pain.
Abstract
Background: Several prognostic factors, including the early recovery pattern of acute low back pain (ALBP), are related to the chronicity of LBP. However, the association between systemic symptoms and ALBP remains underexplored from a holistic perspective. Hence, this study aimed to investigate this relationship and identify novel clinical prognostic predictors for LBP. Methods: This retrospective cross-sectional study included patients with ALBP admitted to the Department of Korean Medicine Rehabilitation at the Dongguk University Bundang Hospital between 1 January 2021 and 30 April 2025. Data extracted from medical records included demographics, treatment-related information, pain characteristics, past medical history, and systemic symptoms. Statistical analyses included independent t-tests, Mann–Whitney U tests, chi-squared tests, Fisher’s exact tests, correlation analysis, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation · Healthcare and Venom Research · Pain Mechanisms and Treatments
