The two-stage therapeutic effect of posture biofeedback training on back pain and the associated mechanism: A retrospective cohort study

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Abstract

Introduction: Back pain is an extremely common symptom experienced by people of all ages and the number one cause of disability worldwide.2 Poor posture has been identified as one of the factors leading to back pain. Digital biofeedback technology demonstrates the promising therapeutic ability in pain management through posture training. One common goal of such an approach is to increase users’ posture awareness with associated movement correction. However, we lack a deep understanding of the biofeedback therapeutic mechanisms and the temporal dynamics of efficacy. Objective: This study investigates the temporal dynamics of the biofeedback learning process and associated outcomes in daily life settings, testing the mechanism of the biofeedback-associated pain reduction. Methods: This retrospective real-world evidence study followed 981 users who used the UpRight posture biofeedback platform. Piecewise mixed models were used for modeling the two-stage trajectory of pain levels, perceived posture quality, and weekly training duration following an 8-week biofeedback training. Also, the mediation effect of perceived posture quality on the analgesic effect of training duration was tested using Monte Carlo simulations based on lagged effect mixed models. Results: The analysis revealed significant pain level reduction (p

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Fundoiano-Hershcovitz, Y., Horwitz, D. L., Tawil, C., Cohen, O., & Goldstein, P. (2022). The two-stage therapeutic effect of posture biofeedback training on back pain and the associated mechanism: A retrospective cohort study. Frontiers in Physiology, 13. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.958033

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