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- Scope of the Problem
-
1. Current thinking in back pain management - introduction
- Ms. Anna Hlavsova MSc, MCSP, HPC
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2. Genetic epidemiology of low back pain and intervertebral disc degeneration
- Dr. Frances Williams
- Biomechanics, Spinal Surgery and Research Methods
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3. The biomechanics of back pain: what we know so far
- Prof. Michael Adams
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4. Low back pain: a composite of interacting systems?
- Prof. Alison McGregor
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5. What does physiotherapy teach us about back pain?
- Ms. Josephine O'Callaghan
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6. How we currently measure back pain
- Prof. Rob Froud
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7. Back pain: are we measuring the right things?
- Prof. Rob Froud
- Chronic Pain and Current Challenges
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8. The psychosocial flags framework: overcoming obstacles to work
- Prof. Kim Burton
- Current Therapies and Treatments
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9. Psychological treatment for people with musculoskeletal pain 1
- Prof. Tamar Pincus
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10. Psychological treatment for people with musculoskeletal pain 2
- Prof. Tamar Pincus
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11. Current thinking in pain medicine and some thoughts on back pain
- Dr. Nick Hacking
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12. Combined physical and psychological programmes plus alternative therapies for back pain
- Ms. Anna Hlavsova MSc, MCSP, HPC
Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Talk outline
- Low back pain
- Why is LBP so challenging?
- LBP and biopsychosocial model
- Intervertebral disc degeneration (IVD) (1)
- Intervertebral disc degeneration (IVD) (2)
- Normal spine - MRI
- Common complex traits
- Heritability
- The classical twin study
- TwinsUK spine study
- Heritability of back pain
- What about heritability of LDD?
- Other back pain phenotypes
- Common genetic variants contributing to LBP
- Candidate gene studies
- The problems with candidate gene studies
- Linkage studies
- Linkage - TwinsUK
- Genome-wide association study (GWAS)
- GWAS meta-analysis
- Chromosome 6 SNP rs 926849
- Hong Kong study (1)
- Hong Kong study (2)
- Association studies: low back pain phenotypes (1)
- Chromosomes 9,15 and 6 locus plots
- Association studies: low back pain phenotypes (2)
- PainOmics
- TwinsUK + Generation Scotland
- Twins UK and Generation Scotland datasets
- Association studies: low back pain phenotypes (3)
- Collaboration with CHARGE consortium
- CHARGE consortium cohorts contributing LBP
- Meta-analysis results CHARGE and Pain_Omics
- CHARGE consortium + UK BioBank GWAS
- What are Omics?
- Omics in LBP
- Summary
- Concluding remarks
Topics Covered
- The problem of low back pain (LBP)
- Intervertebral disc degeneration
- Twin studies and their contribution
- Genetic studies
- Candidate genes, linkage and genome-wide association
- PainOmics
Talk Citation
Williams, F. (2018, August 30). Genetic epidemiology of low back pain and intervertebral disc degeneration [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 22, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/QDTV3562.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Dr. Frances Williams has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
A selection of talks on Clinical Practice
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
My name is Frances Williams and I work in Genetic Epidemiology at King's College London.
I'm also a Consultant Rheumatologist,
Guy's and St. Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust,
and I'm delighted to give this talk on
the Genetic Epidemiology of Low Back Pain and Intervertebral Disc Degeneration.
0:18
In this talk, I will describe the enormous burden of low back pain worldwide,
will cover its relationship with
intervertebral disc degeneration and the contribution made by twin studies
and large epidemiological studies to understanding
intervertebral disc degeneration in the general population.
I will also touch on the role of
the new techniques available in genetics and Omics studies,
to identify new pathways in pathogenesis.
0:46
Low back pain is a huge social problem and is defined as the pain between
the costal margin and inferior gluteal fold lasting more than three months.
Previously considered to be a most burdensome condition in Western societies,
it is now recognized as a worldwide problem.
The Lancet Global Burden of Disease ranked it sixth and it's less than 2010,
having risen from 11th position in 1990.
Of note, it ranks first,
as a cause of disability in Western Europe and Australasia.
Second, in North Africa,
Middle East and Asia Pacific,
and South Latin America.
The overall costs associated with low back pain,
including consultations, investigation, treatment, time off work,
disability benefits are estimated to exceed €15 billion in Europe alone and it
needs to be recognized that Western medicine largely
overlooks the very considerable proportion of low back pain,
which is labeled as mechanical low back pain,
which disc degeneration is usually underlying.
Western medicine being very much geared to identifying rarer causes of low back pain,
such as tumor and inflammatory spine disease.
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