Association of Nociplastic Pain Features with Function in Aging Veterans with Chronic Low Back Pain
Victoria D Powell, Jinkyung Ha, Andrzej Galecki, Dan Clauw, Pooja Lagisetty, Maria Silveira, Caroline Logue, Sarah Krein

TL;DR
This study finds that nociplastic pain features are common in older Veterans with chronic back pain and are linked to worse physical and mental health.
Contribution
The study identifies a strong association between nociplastic pain features and functional impairment in aging Veterans with chronic low back pain.
Findings
Nociplastic features were highly prevalent, with 36% meeting fibromyalgia criteria.
Higher fibromyalgia severity scores correlated with worse physical and psychological function.
Widespread pain was common, with an average of six pain locations reported.
Abstract
Chronic low back pain (CLBP) affects nearly one million Veterans and is a leading cause of disability. Nociplastic pain, characterized by altered central nervous system processing, widespread pain and sleep disturbance, may negatively impact treatment response in this population, yet remains underrecognized. Determine the prevalence and association of nociplastic features with function among aging Veterans with CLBP. Cross-sectional survey of Veterans aged 50–89 years with CLBP identified through VA administrative data. A stratified random sampling design oversampled women and Black/African-American veterans. Of 800 invited, 361 responded (45.1% response rate); after excluding those without CLBP, 342 participants were included (mean age 69.2 years, 19.2% women, 17.8% Black/African-American). Nociplastic features were assessed using the Fibromyalgia Survey Questionnaire to calculate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation · Spine and Intervertebral Disc Pathology · Pain Mechanisms and Treatments
