# Role of Rate of Force Development in Mediating the Relationship Between Task-Specific Fear and Chronic Low Back Pain Among Japanese Caregivers: A Pilot Cross-Sectional Mediation Study

**Authors:** Teppei Abiko, Shin Murata, Hayato Shigetoh, Norihisa Matsumoto, Yamaguchi Hideaki, Michie Ohyama, Eiji Sakata, Wayne Hing

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.98512 · 2025-12-05

## TL;DR

This study explores how fear of movement in caregivers relates to chronic low back pain through reduced explosive strength during sit-to-stand tasks.

## Contribution

The study identifies rate of force development as a potential biomarker linking task-specific fear to chronic low back pain in caregivers.

## Key findings

- Early-phase RFD during stand-to-sit correlated negatively with task-specific fear and CLBP intensity.
- Mediation analysis showed a significant indirect effect of fear on CLBP through RFD.
- Higher fear was associated with suppressed RFD, suggesting a force-control deficit linked to chronic pain.

## Abstract

Background

Chronic low back pain (CLBP) is prevalent among caregivers; however, the mechanisms linking psychological factors like fear of movement to pain are unclear. This study investigated whether the rate of force development (RFD), a measure of explosive strength, mediates the relationship between task-specific fear and CLBP intensity in this high-risk population.

Methods

Thirty-two Japanese care workers (13 CLBP, 19 healthy) performed sit-to-stand and stand-to-sit tasks on a force plate after rating their task-specific fear. Vertical ground reaction force was used to calculate early-phase RFD (0-100 ms) during stand-to-sit, the prespecified mediator. CLBP was defined as pain persisting for >3 months. Associations were analyzed using Spearman's correlation and a 1,000-sample bootstrap mediation model.

Results

Early-phase RFD (0-100 ms) during stand-to-sit correlated negatively with both task-specific fear (ρ = -0.43) and CLBP intensity (ρ = -0.51). The mediation analysis confirmed a significant indirect effect of fear on CLBP through RFD (B = 0.39, 95% CI (0.06, 1.30)). The total effect of fear on pain was also significant (B = 5.58, 95% CI (0.39, 18.61)).

Conclusion

In caregivers, higher task-specific fear is associated with suppressed RFD during the stand-to-sit task, reflecting a force-control deficit linked to CLBP. Early-phase RFD is a promising biomarker for identifying fear-driven motor inhibition. These findings suggest that workplace interventions that combine graded exposure with explosive-strength training may effectively reduce the risk of chronic pain.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** CLBP (MESH:D017116), chronic pain (MESH:D059350), pain (MESH:D010146), Fear (MESH:C000719212)

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12765356/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12765356