According to a recent study, individuals with diabetes are more probably to suffer from low backache and neck pain as compared to those without diabetes. The researchers from the University of Sydney found that folks with the polygenic disease have a 35 percent higher risk of experiencing low back pain and a 24 percent higher risk of getting neck pain. Their findings, supported meta-analyses of studies that assess the links between Diabetics and back or neck pain outcomes, were published within the journal ‘PLOS ONE’.
Most adults experience low back pain throughout their lives and virtually half suffer neck pain at some stage. Diabetes is an increasingly prevalent chronic condition. An estimated of 382 million people live with type 2 diabetes, the most common form of this metabolic disease.
“Diabetes and low back pain and neck pain appear to be somehow connected. We can’t say how but these findings counsel additional analysis into the link is secured,” aforesaid senior study author Manuela Ferreira. However, the reason behind the pain isn't absolutely established, the researchers declared. The team conducted a meta-analysis and enclosed eight studies. The analysis conjointly showed that Type 2 diabetes and low back pain are linked to obesity and lack of physical activity.
“Type 2 diabetes and low back pain each have a strong relationship with obesity and lack of physical activity, thus a logical progression of this analysis may well be to look at these factors in additional detail. Our analysis adds to the evidence that weight control and physical activity play basic roles in health maintenance,” Ferreira added.
The study conjointly found that diabetes medication might influence pain, presumably via its impact on blood sugar levels, and this connection ought to even be investigated. It conjointly suggested health care professionals ought to contemplate screening for unknown diabetes in patients seeking care for neck pain or low back pain.
“Neck and back pain and diabetes are afflicting more and a lot of individuals. It’s price committing a lot of resources to research their interrelatedness. it should be that neutering treatment interventions for the polygenic disease might reduce the incidence of back pain, and the other way around,” concluded co-author Paulo Ferreira.