1. A prospective cohort study of low back outcomes and alternative measures of cumulative external and internal vibration load on the lumbar spine of professional drivers
- Author
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Marianne Schust, Massimo Bovenzi, Bovenzi, Massimo, and Schust, Marianne
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,driver ,low-back outcome ,whole body vibration ,back pain ,intraspinal force ,Acceleration ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Lumbar ,low-back pain ,Occupational Exposure ,Back pain ,medicine ,cohort study ,Whole body vibration ,Humans ,acceleration magnitude ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Generalized estimating equation ,business.industry ,lumbar spine ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,load ,Low back pain ,vibration dose ,Occupational Diseases ,Cohort ,Original Article ,medicine.symptom ,vibration ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,business ,Low Back Pain - Abstract
Objective The aim of this study was to compare the performance of alternative measures of cumulative lifetime vibration dose to predict the occurrence of low-back pain (LBP) outcomes in a cohort of 537 professional drivers investigated at baseline and over a two-year follow up period. Methods The exposure data obtained in the EU VIBRISKS project were used to calculate alternative measures of either acceleration- (external) or force- (internal) based lifetime vibration doses. Vibration was measured in representative samples of machines and vehicles used by the drivers. Internal lumbar forces were calculated by means of anatomy-, posture-, and anthropometry-based finite element models. The relations of LBP outcomes to alternative measures of lifetime vibration doses were assessed by the generalized estimating equations method. Results Metrics of cumulative vibration exposure constructed with either acceleration- or force-based methods were significantly associated with the occurrence of LBP outcomes. A measure of model fitting suggested that force-based doses were better predictors of LBP outcomes than acceleration-based doses. Models with force root-mean-square doses provided a better fit to LBP outcomes than those with force-peak doses. Conclusions Measures of internal lumbar forces were better predictors of LBP outcomes than measures of external vibration acceleration although the exposure metrics constructed with the acceleration-based method have the advantage of greater simplicity compared to the force-based method. The differences between the models with force-based doses suggest that the cumulative health effects on the lumbar spine might depend on the integrated resulting total force over the entire exposure time rather than primarily on the force peaks.
- Published
- 2021