AI Insight
This cross-sectional study of 410 adults with spinal pain in the Gaza Strip found that chronic neck pain and chronic low back pain were associated with significantly greater disability, fatigue, and psychological distress compared to their acute counterparts, while sleep disturbance was similarly prevalent across all groups. Female participants consistently reported higher psychological distress, with additional elevations in fatigue for neck pain and disability for low back pain. Adjusted regression analyses confirmed that fatigue was the most consistent independent factor associated with chronic pain status.
Why it matters
These findings highlight the need for early multidimensional clinical assessment in spinal pain patients, particularly screening for fatigue and psychological distress, which may help prevent the transition from acute to chronic pain even in resource-limited and conflict-affected settings.
⚠️ Preprint – Noch nicht peer-reviewed
Dieser Artikel wurde noch nicht von unabhängigen Experten begutachtet. Die Ergebnisse sind vorläufig und sollten mit Vorsicht interpretiert werden.
Background: Spinal pain, including neck pain and low back pain (LBP), is a common musculoskeletal condition and major contributor to disability worldwide. Evidence comparing disability, fatigue and mental health across acute and chronic stages remains limited, particularly in conflict-affected and low-resource settings. This study assessed these outcomes among patients with acute and chronic neck pain and LBP in the Gaza Strip. Methods: A comparative cross-sectional study was conducted among 410 adults attending outpatient physical therapy at Nasser Medical Complex, Khan Younis, Gaza Strip. Participants included 204 with neck pain and 206 with LBP, classified as acute neck pain (n=101), chronic neck pain (n=103), acute LBP (n=102) and chronic LBP (n=104). Disability, fatigue, psychological distress and sleep disturbance were assessed using the Neck Disability Index (NDI)/Oswestry Disability Index (ODI), Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS), Patient Health Questionnaire-4 (PHQ-4) and PROMIS Sleep Disturbance Short Form 8a. Independent t-tests, adjusted linear regression, correlation analyses, clinical-threshold analyses and binary logistic regression were performed. Results: Chronic neck pain and chronic LBP were associated with significantly higher disability, fatigue and psychological distress than acute pain. Chronic neck pain patients had higher NDI, FSS and PHQ-4 scores than acute neck pain patients; chronic LBP patients had higher ODI, FSS and PHQ-4 scores than acute LBP patients (all p<0.001). Sleep disturbance did not differ significantly between groups. Female participants reported higher psychological distress in both pain groups, with higher fatigue in neck pain and higher disability in LBP. Adjusted analyses confirmed that chronic pain status remained associated with higher disability, fatigue and psychological distress. Fatigue was the most consistent factor independently associated with chronic pain status. Conclusions: Chronic spinal pain was associated with greater disability, fatigue and psychological distress than acute spinal pain, while sleep disturbance was common across groups. These findings support early multidimensional assessment, including screening for fatigue and psychological distress. Longitudinal studies are needed to clarify whether these factors contribute to transition from acute to chronic spinal pain.