Traction for low back pain
with or without sciatica: an updated systematic review
within the framework of the Cochrane collaboration.
Spine. 2006 Jun
15;31(14):1591-9.
Clarke J, van Tulder M, Blomberg S, de Vet H, van
der Heijden G, Bronfort G.
Institute for Work & Health,
Toronto, Ontario, Canada. jclarke@iwh.on.ca
Study Design: Systematic
review.
Objective: To determine if
traction is more effective than reference treatments,
placebo/sham traction, or no treatment for low back pain
(LBP).
Summary of Background Data:
Various types of traction are used in the treatment of
LBP, often in conjunction with other treatments.
Methods: We searched
MEDLINE, EMBASE, and CINAHL to November 2004, and
screened the latest issue of the Cochrane Library (2004,
issue 4) and references in relevant reviews and our
personal files. We selected randomized controlled trials
(RCTs) involving any type of traction for the treatment
of acute (less than 4 weeks duration), subacute (4-12
weeks), or chronic (more than 12 weeks) nonspecific LBP
with or without sciatica. Sets of 2 reviewers
independently performed study selection, methodological
quality assessment, and data extraction. Because
available studies did not provide sufficient data for
statistical pooling, we performed a qualitative "levels
of evidence" analysis, systematically estimating the
strength of the cumulative evidence on the difference/lack
of difference observed in trial outcomes.
Results: A total of 24 RCTs
(2177 patients) were included. There were 5 trials
considered high quality. For mixed groups of patients
with LBP with and without sciatica, we found: (1) strong
evidence that there is no statistically significant
difference in short or long-term outcomes between
traction as a single treatment, (continuous or
intermittent) and placebo, sham, or no treatment; (2)
moderate evidence that traction as a single treatment is
no more effective than other treatments; and (3) limited
evidence that adding traction to a standard
physiotherapy program does not result in significantly
different outcomes. For LBP with sciatica, we found
conflicting evidence in several of the comparisons:
autotraction compared to placebo, sham, or no treatment;
other forms of traction compared to other treatments;
and different forms of traction. In the remaining
comparisons, there were no statistically significant
differences; level of evidence is moderate regarding
continuous or intermittent traction compared to placebo,
sham, or no treatment, and is limited regarding
different forms of traction.
Conclusion: Based on the
current evidence, intermittent or continuous traction as
a single treatment for LBP cannot be recommended for
mixed groups of patients with LBP with and without
sciatica. Neither can traction be recommended for
patients with sciatica because of inconsistent results
and methodological problems in most of the studies
involved. However, because high-quality studies within
the field are scarce, because many are underpowered, and
because traction often is supplied in combination with
other treatment modalities, the literature allows no
firm negative conclusion that traction, in a generalized
sense, is not an effective treatment for patients with
LBP. |