Physical Activity and Pain During Pregnancy

Sarah Velez, Traci A. McCarthy, Andrea Spaeth
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Abstract

Low back and pelvic girdle pain are prevalent during pregnancy, impacting about 50% of pregnant women. Previous studies conducted on the general population have suggested that physical activity has been associated with reductions in pain levels. Purpose: To determine if women with higher levels of physical activity experience less low back and pelvic girdle pain and lower disability scores than women who are less physically active. Methods: Pregnant women (n=24, 32.2 ± 4.1 years) were recruited between 28- and 32-weeks gestation. Participants reported their weekly physical activity, responded to subjective pain surveys, and underwent a battery of objective pain testing. Spearman’s-rho was used to assess correlations between physical activity scores and each subjective pain measure. Results: Tests for correlation between pregnancy physical activity scores and pain domain measures were not significant (ps>0.05), so no relationship could be determined between physical activity levels and low back/pelvic girdle pain based on this study. Conclusion: This study was not able to identify a significant correlation between physical activity levels and low back/pelvic girdle pain during pregnancy.
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孕期运动与疼痛
腰背和骨盆腰部疼痛是孕期的常见病,影响了约 50% 的孕妇。目的:确定体力活动较多的妇女是否比体力活动较少的妇女腰背和骨盆疼痛更轻,残疾评分更低:在妊娠 28 至 32 周之间招募孕妇(24 人,32.2 ± 4.1 岁)。参与者报告了每周的运动量,回答了主观疼痛调查,并接受了一系列客观疼痛测试。Spearman's-rho 用于评估体力活动得分与各项主观疼痛测量之间的相关性:结果:妊娠期体力活动评分与疼痛领域测量之间的相关性测试结果不显著(Ps>0.05),因此本研究无法确定体力活动水平与腰背/骨盆疼痛之间的关系:本研究无法确定孕期体力活动水平与腰背/骨盆腰痛之间的显著相关性。
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