Statistics suggest that low back
pain (LBP) will plague most of us at some point in our lives, if it hasn’t
already. Most healthcare professions that manage patients with low back pain
focus on pain management. In fact, studies have reported that 67% of patient
satisfaction is driven by pain elimination. One of the most common strategies
for reducing pain is managing inflammation. The “easiest” way to do this
(according to the many TV commercials and magazine advertisements) is to take
one of the many non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) such as
Ibuprofen (Advil, Nuprin), Piroxicam Flurbiprofen, and Indomethacin. Let’s take
a closer look to see if this is a good or bad idea!
In a recent March 2015 article,
researchers investigated the use of NSAIDs between 1993 and 2012 in patients
who had fractures that failed to heal, technically called “non-union
fractures.” They found that non-union fractures increased during years when
NSAID use was increasingly recommended for patients with fractures and dropped
in years when NSAID use declined. This isn’t the first study to report poor
fracture healing results from NSAIDs when they’re used as the primary form of
pain relief and in fact, studies on this subject date back to the early 1990s.
So how does this equate to LBP? Most directly, fractures are one of the many
causes of LBP, so for that population, the answer is clear. However, LBP is
much more commonly caused by sprains (ligament injuries) and strains
(muscle/tendon injuries), as well as cartilage injury. Here too, studies show
that the healing rate of sprains, strains, and cartilage is also delayed when
NSAIDs are used as the primary pain relief approach. This healing delay is
reportedly due to NSAIDs' inhibition of “proteoglycan synthesis,” a component
of ligament and cartilage tissue regeneration and repair. NSAIDs also inhibit
release of prostaglandins (especially prostaglandin E2), which is needed for
tissue repair. These effects are ESPECIALLY observed with long-term use, but
recent studies show injured athletes are best off NOT taking NSAIDs AT ALL as
these drugs delay the healing process and thus the athlete's ability to return
to their sport.
In a January 2015 study, researchers
criticized the common use of NSAIDs in elderly patients for the treatment of
non-cancerous pain. They found 75% of the elderly population studied was
prescribed NSAIDs which, in retrospect, the researchers determined to be
inappropriate! Because NSAIDs interfere
with healing, the net effect is an ACCELERATION of osteoarthritis and joint
deterioration! In 1995, a North Carolina School of Medicine study compared four
groups of patients with soft tissue injuries (tendon strains): Group 1 received
NO treatment (control group); Group 2 received exercise only; Group 3 received
exercise AND Indomethacin; and Group 4 received Indomethacin only. At 72 hours
post-injury, ONLY the exercise group had an INCREASE in prostaglandins (E2
particularly – necessary for healing). This effect was even more profound at
108 hours after injury. The research team also found DNA synthesis in the
fibroblasts (an important part of the repair mechanism) was greatest in the
exercise group and was completely lacking in the NSAID-only group.
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