scholarly journals Back pain in pregnant women attending an antenatal clinic in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

2021 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carmen Hawker ◽  
Laura O'Connor ◽  
Poovendhree Reddy ◽  
Firoza Haffejee ◽  
Maureen N. Sibiya ◽  
...  

Background: Back pain is not uncommon in pregnant women, but it is often under-reported and can be disabling. International studies report a high prevalence of back pain, especially in the last trimester. Little is known about the prevalence of back pain in South African pregnant women.Aim: To determine the prevalence and risk factors of back pain in a cohort of pregnant womenSetting: Public primary healthcare clinics and the eThekwini municipality of KwaZulu-Natal (KZN), South AfricaMethods: A descriptive cohort design was used to survey pregnant women (n = 303) over the course of their pregnancy. Data were collected at the first antenatal visit and again in the third trimester. Participants gave consent and ethical clearance was obtained from an institutional research ethics committee, from the eThekwini Health District and KZN Provincial Department of Health.Results: The respondents were young Black African women (mean age of 25.8 (± 6.0), who were mostly unemployed (70.7%), and resided in a resource poor setting. Back pain prevalence at the first antenatal visit and the third trimester was 12.4% (n = 35) and 10.9% (n = 5), respectively. This condition was associated with carrying water and residing in a hostel or an employee’s property. Being single was associated with less risk for developing back pain.Conclusion: The prevalence of back pain was low in this cohort of women, yet it resulted in a negative impact on the women’s ability to cope with daily life.Contribution: This is one of the first studies to describe back pain in a South African pregnant population.

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 268-273
Author(s):  
Roghayeh Dargahi ◽  
Behrooz Nazari ◽  
Abbasali Dorosti ◽  
Saeid Charsouei

Objectives: Many factors such as stress and psychological tension affect the mental and physical health of pregnant women in the third trimester during the coronavirus pandemic. These factors can cause severe complications such as sleep disorders and low back pain. Therefore, this study focused on investigating sleep disorders in women by diagnosing low back pain in pregnant women with coronavirus and the affecting factors. Materials and Methods: This descriptive-analytical study was performed during the four months ending July 5, 2020 with the participation of 40 pregnant women (with coronavirus disease detected in the last trimester of pregnancy) with a diagnosis of low back pain in Tabriz (Iran) using a random sampling technique. Demographic data, anxiety and depression, Petersburg’s sleep quality, factors affecting sleep quality, and the severity of back pain (visual analog scale) were electronically collected and analyzed using SPSS 20 by ANOVA and multivariate regression. Results: All participants were at a weak level. The majority of participants had a score of "serious sleep problem", and nausea and vomiting (P=0.041), low back pain (P=0.003), frequent urination (P=0.011), leg cramps (P=0.031), and constipation (P=0.018) caused severe sleep disturbance in pregnant women during coronavirus pandemic. Conclusions: In general, having coronavirus disease causes severe pain in pregnant women, leading to severe back pain in pregnancy, eventually worsening sleep disorders.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Kurniyati Kurniyati ◽  
Derison Marsinova Bakara

Changes that occur during pregnancy may be difficult during pregnancy and during childbirth. Complications during pregnancy include back pain, low back pain, pelvic pain, and shortness of breath. One of the most common discomforts is back pain. Back pain is the most common musculoskeletal problem in pregnant women. It is estimated that 50% to 70% of pregnant women suffer from this problem. The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of pelvic tilt training on the reduction of back pain in third-trimester pregnant women in the Rejang Lebong Regency. The research variable was back pain in third-trimester pregnant women measured before and after pelvic tilt exercises. The research was conducted in May-July 2020. This type of research is Quasi-Experimental, the results of the sample calculation obtained a sample of 32 people. The statistical test used to see the reduction in back pain before and after Pelvic tilt exercise is non-parametric Wilcoxon. Results of back pain in the third trimester of pregnant women after being given pelvic tilt exercise with p <0.005. There is a difference in back pain in the third trimester of pregnant women after pelvic tilt exercises.


2021 ◽  
Vol 25 ◽  
pp. 24-27
Author(s):  
Gabriel Vitor de Sousa Oliveira ◽  
Almir Vieira Dibai Filho ◽  
Daniela Bassi Dibai ◽  
Flor de Maria Araujo Mendonça Silva ◽  
Wellyson da Cunha Araújo Firmo ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 26-35
Author(s):  
O. A. Krichevskaya ◽  
Z. M. Gandaloeva ◽  
A. B. Demina ◽  
S. I. Glukhova ◽  
T. V. Dubinina

Inflammatory rhythm back pain and enthesitis are one of the main clinical manifestations of ankylosing spondylitis (AS), which increase in severity during pregnancy. However, addition of back pain and, possibly, enthesis in the second half of gestation, which is associated with normal pregnancy, needs to make a differential diagnosis for clarifying the genesis of pain and choosing the right management tactics, which determines the relevance of this study.Objective: to investigate the course of pain in the back, enthesis, and inguinal region, as well as the functional status in AS patients during pregnancy and to reveal clinical signs that most accurately reflect inflammatory activity during gestation.Patients and methods. A study included 36 pregnant women with a reliable diagnosis of AS according to the modified New York criteria (1984). Their mean age was 31.6±4.8 years, the mean age at the onset of AS was 21.8±10.9 years; the duration of the disease was 134.9±89.3 months. A control group comprised 30 healthy pregnant women with no history of back pain and arthritis; their mean age was 28.2±4.5 years. The pregnant women of both groups were matched for parity. They made visits at 10–11, 20–21, and 31–32 weeks of pregnancy. Pain intensity was estimated using the numerical pain rating scale (NPRS) and the functional status was assessed by the Bath Ankylosing Spondylitis Functional Index (BASFI). The Maastricht Ankylosing Spondylitis Enthesitis Score (MASES) was used to assess enthesitis.Results and discussion. During pregnancy, 94% of AS patients had back pain; its intensity by trimesters was 3 [2; 4], 4 [3; 5.5], 3 [2; 7] and was higher than in healthy pregnant women (p<0.0001). In the study group, there was a rise in pain intensity at night with increasing gestational age (n=23–28): 2 [1; 4] in the first trimester; 3 [0; 5] II in the second trimester; 3 [1; 6] in the third trimester (p< when comparing the first, second, and third trimesters) and an increase in the duration of morning stiffness (n= ): 10 [5; 20], 15 [10; 55], and 15 [5; 60] min, respectively. Moreover, the number of women who reported improvements after exercise (85–63%) and no improvement at rest (88–56%) declined (p<0.05 when comparing the first, second, and third trimesters).In the control group, 1 and 3 patients had morning back stiffness and night pain, respectively. The healthy pregnant women more frequently reported a reduction in back pain after exercise in the third trimester (66.7% of those with pain) than in the first trimester (20% of those with pain) (p<0.05).By the third trimester, the patients with AS showed a change in the nature of back pain: 43.7% of the patients reported an improvement at rest; 42.4% noted an increase in pain after exercise, while the frequency of elements of mechanical back pain was less than that in the control group (p < 0.05).The intensity of groin pain (2.4±1.9, 3.3±2.4, and 4.3±3.0 in the first, second, and third trimesters, respectively) did not differ in AS patients with and without coxitis or pelvic enthesitis. The frequency of enthesitis and MASES scores in the study group were higher than in the control group (p<0.05), the MASES scores increased with gestational age, amounting to 0 [0; 1] in the first trimester and 2 [0; 3] in the third trimester (p<0.05).Functional disorders during pregnancy increased in both groups; there was a difference in BASFI scores between the groups only in the third trimester: 3.5±2.8 and 1.7±1.2, respectively (p<0.05).Conclusion. Back pain and functional disorders increase in AS patients during gestation. Night back pain, morning stiffness, and enthesitis reflect the inflammatory activity of AS during pregnancy. Mechanical back pain joins in 40% of women with AS in the third trimester. The criteria for inflammatory back pain and BASFI require adaptation when used in pregnant women.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 241-249
Author(s):  
Siti Mutoharoh ◽  
Dyah Puji Astuti ◽  
Kusumastuti Kusumastuti ◽  
Wulan Rahmadhani ◽  
Phan Trieu Phu MD

Lower back pain is common for pregnant women. The back pain was  caused by the shift of the center of gravity towards the front as the uterus enlarges. This study aims to determine the effectiveness of pregnancy exercise with the addition of Kinesio taping on low back pain in pregnant mother  at third trimester.The study used a quasi-experimental method and it was conducted in a rural area under the coverage area of a puskesmas in Kebumen District. The population in this study wasl pregnant women in the area with a total of 247 pregnant women. This study involved 36 pregnant women in the third trimester selected using a purposive sampling technique with the criteria of primiparous and multiparous, 28-36 weeks of gestation, experiencing low back pain, and no history of comorbidities and complications during pregnancy. Data were analyzed using the Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test. The results showed that pregnancy exercise with the addition of Kinesio taping had a significant effect on reducing low back pain in pregnant mother in the third trimester indicated by a P-value of 0.001.Pregnancy exercise with the addition of Kinesio taping can reduce low back pain in pregnant women in the third trimester.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-45
Author(s):  
Ivana Argo Cahyani ◽  
Sri Winarsih ◽  
Arfiana Arfiana

Background: Pregnancy becomes a meaningful experience with all the changes both physically and psychologically. One of the changes is discomfort that occurs in the third trimester is lower back pain. Lower back pain can cause disruption of daily physical activity. Endorphin massage can be one of the measures to reduce pain in third trimester pregnant women because it releases endorphins from light massage and positive affirmations from the husband.Methods: This research was conducted in the working area of Pare Public Health Center Temanggung District. The methods used Quasi Experimental with Non-Equivalent Control Group Design. The population of this study were all third-trimester pregnant women with a gestational age of 36 weeks, its about 46 people. The tool used the data collection an observation sheet on the scale of Mankoski pain. Data analysis used Wilcoxon test.Result: The results of the study used Wilcoxon test items, namely p value of endorphin massage group of 0,000 with a value of Z 3.787 and the control group p value of 0.025 with a value of Z 2.235. This showed that both groups were equally influential, but the endorphins group had a stronger influence compared to the control group.Conclusion: Endorphin massage had an effect on reduced lower back pain in the third trimester of pregnant women. Endorphin massage contain mild massage and positive affirmations from husband that stimulated the emergence of endorphin so reduce pain sensation roomates. It was expected that endorphin massage can be applied by pregnant women and husband or families as one method of decreasing low back pain because it helped empower husband / families to improve the welfare of pregnant woman.


Academia Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anggraeni Kriswidya Putri ◽  
Hanik Machfudloh

Pregnancy is a process that begins with the unification of spermatozoa with ovum called fertilization and then continued with implantation. Normal pregnancies generally last for 9 months, and are divided into the first 3 trimesters 1-12 weeks, the second trimester 13-27 weeks, the third trimester 28-40 weeks. Various complaints felt by pregnant women, one of which is back pain that causes pregnant women discomfort. This aerikel was written taken from the place of Maternity Clinic Karunia Sidoarjo on January 05, 2020. The way of data collection is by means of anamnesa, examination of analysis, data then documenting by comparing between the data that has been obtained with existing theories. Mrs. .m 40 weeks gestational age, with complaints of physiological back pain with good maternal and fetal conditions.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Carmen Hawker

Background: The prevalence of back pain and general discomfort is not uncommon in pregnant women, often being under-reported until it affects their daily routine. South Africa, a third world developing country has unique risk factors and demographic profile. Although many studies have previously studied the various factors relating to back pain in pregnancy, this topic is far from being exhausted as a research area. Specifically, new studies should be conducted on the prevalence of back pain in pregnancy to analyse the impact it has on women worldwide. Little research has been conducted on rural communities in Africa especially in South Africa, to assess the risk of pregnancy-related back pain. Therefore, the information obtained from this study will provide a better understanding of the demographics, physical demands and psycho-social stresses experienced by pregnant women in this understudied population. Back pain and general discomfort is not uncommon in pregnant women, but it is often under- reported and can be disabling. International studies report a high prevalence especially in the last trimester. Little is known about the prevalence of and risk factors for back pain in South African pregnant women. Thus, this study aimed to determine the relationship between socio-demographic and psychosocial factors in a cohort of pregnant women attending a primary health care clinic in the eThekwini municipality of the province of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Method: A retrospective descriptive cohort design was utilized whereby 382 participants’ files were assessed for eligibility. The files consisted of a socio-demographic questionnaire, a chart review and two epidemiological questionnaires that were administered to the participants during the first and third trimester. Permission to access these files was obtained from the principle investigator of the MRC/DUT project. All participants signed consent forms for research purposes. The data relevant to this study was extracted and analysed using Statistical Package for the Social Science version 24.0 (IMB Analytics). Descriptive statistics were used to describe the data in terms of means and standard deviations or frequencies and count where appropriate. Inferential statistics allowed for relationships between the variables to be assessed. A p - value of less than 0.05 was used to indicate statistical significance. Results: The total of 303 files were included. Participants were Black Africans, mostly single (81.2%, n=229) with a mean age of 25.84 (±SD 6.04). There was a high unemployment rate (70.8%, n=199), with most having obtained a secondary education (77.1%, n=213), and 44.1% (n=122) residing in squatter camps. There was a high human immunodeficiency infection rate (40.5%, n=94). Of the 303 participant files eligible for the study only 46 returned for the third trimester follow up. The prevalence of BP in the first trimester was 12.4% (n=35) and 10.9% (n=5) in the third trimester. LBP was the most (8.5%, n=24) in the first and 10.9% (n=5) in the third trimester, followed by UBP and NP. The incidence of back pain over the duration of pregnancy was zero. Being single (p = 0.03), reporting no stress (p = 0.04), not using pain killers (p = 0.01), and no alcohol consumption in the current pregnancy (p = 0.03) were associated with a decreased risk of back pain. There were no relationships found between the variables and back pain prevalence in the third trimester. Conclusion: The women attending this primary health care clinic are relatively young, come from a low socio-economic area with low reported levels of stress and substance abuse. They reported low levels of back pain. The follow up rate at the third trimester was low and this may skew the results of this study. Further research is needed in this community and South Africa to appreciate the prevalence and impact of back pain in pregnancy.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 82-87
Author(s):  
Ranny Septiani

Back pain is one of the most common complaints experienced by pregnant women in their third trimester of pregnancy. Of the 172 pregnant women in the third trimester of pregnancy, 80% (137 people) experienced back pain. One way to deal with back pain is to do pregnancy exercises. There are various types of pregnancy exercises, this study uses pregnancy exercises according to Manuaba. The purpose of this study is to study the effect of pregnancy training according to Manuaba on back pain in pregnant women of the third trimester in Metro City. The design of this study is a pseudo-experimental research with a single group approach. The population in this study was all third trimester pregnant women at the Puskesmas in Metro City. The sampling technique was a temporary sample with a sample of pregnant women in the third trimester with back pain complaints. Data analysis in this study uses univariate analysis with frequency and bivariate percentage analysis with t-test. The results of this study show that there is a difference in back pain before and after pregnancy training, according to Manuaba, with a mean difference of 3.06. In conclusion, there are effects of exercise, according to Manuaba, on back pain in pregnant women. These results are expected to be a source of reference for health workers to perform pregnancy exercises according to Manuaba to pregnant women to reduce back pain in pregnant women.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 134
Author(s):  
Wigutomo Gozali ◽  
Nyoman Ayu Dwi Astini ◽  
M Rizal Permadi

The enlargement of the uterus and weight gain in the third trimester of pregnancy then the center of gravity moves forward so that the pregnant woman must adjust her stance. Improper body changes will force additional stretching and fatigue on the body, especially in the back. One of the causes of low back pain is due to hormonal changes that cause changes in the supporting and connecting soft tissues resulting in decreased muscle elasticity and flexibility. The negative impact caused by low back pain is that it can cause a decrease in the quality of life of pregnant women due to disruption of daily physical activities. The research objective was to determine the intensity of pain before and after back pain intervention in two and third trimester pregnant women in Pengelatan Village, Buleleng District, Buleleng Regency. This research is a pre-experimental study with a "One Group Pretest-Postest" design. The sampling method used was total sampling. Data collection by interviews, observation, intervention and pain scale Visual Analog Scale (VAS). Analysis data using the univariate and bevariate analysis using paired t-test. The results of the study were differences in pain intensity before and after respondents in the massage intervention. Pregnant women should routinely do massage therapy to reduce pain.


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