Posted on 07/08/2021 9:04:35 AM PDT by Red Badger

And might increase the risk of side effects.
Muscle relaxant drugs are largely ineffective for low back pain, despite being widely prescribed for this condition, suggests an analysis of the latest evidence published by The BMJ today.
The findings show that muscle relaxants might reduce pain in the short term, but the effect is too small to be considered clinically meaningful, and there is an increased risk of side effects.
But the researchers stress that the certainty of evidence is low and say large trials are urgently needed to resolve uncertainties around the use of these drugs for back pain.
Low back pain is a global public health problem and muscle relaxants (a broad class of drugs that include non-benzodiazepine antispasmodics and antispastics) are a commonly prescribed treatment.
For example, in 2020, prescriptions in England exceeded 1.3 million, and in the US more than 30 million. Yet around the world, clinical practice guidelines provide conflicting recommendations for their use.
To address this, researchers in Australia investigated the effectiveness, acceptability, and safety of muscle relaxants compared with placebo, usual care, or no treatment in adults with non-specific low back pain.
They reviewed and carried out a detailed analysis of evidence from 31 randomized controlled trials involving over 6,500 participants, published up to February 2021.
The trials were of varying quality, but the researchers were able to assess the certainty of evidence using the recognized GRADE system.
They set a difference of at least 10 points on a 0 to 100 point scale for pain and disability to be the smallest clinically important effect – a threshold used in other low back pain studies.
Very low certainty evidence showed that non-benzodiazepine antispasmodic drugs might reduce pain intensity at two weeks or less for patients with acute low back pain compared with controls. But this effect is small – less than 8 points on a 0-100 point scale – and does not meet common thresholds to be clinically meaningful.
There was little to no effect of non-benzodiazepine antispasmodics on pain intensity at 3-13 weeks or on disability at all follow-up time points.
Low and very low certainty evidence also showed that non-benzodiazepine antispasmodics might increase the risk of adverse events (commonly, dizziness, drowsiness, headache and nausea) and might have little to no effect on treatment discontinuation compared with controls.
No trials evaluated the effect of muscle relaxants on long term outcomes.
Although this analysis was based on the best available trial evidence, the researchers acknowledge some limitations, and say the modest overall effect could still mean that some, but not all, individuals gain a worthwhile benefit.
However, they stress that the low to very low certainty of evidence does not allow any firm recommendations.
“We would encourage clinicians to discuss this uncertainty in the efficacy and safety of muscle relaxants with patients, sharing information about the possibility for a worthwhile benefit in pain reduction but increased risk of experiencing a non-serious adverse event, to allow them to make informed treatment decisions,” they write.
“Large, high quality, placebo-controlled trials are urgently needed to resolve uncertainties about the efficacy and safety of muscle relaxants for low back pain,” they conclude.
Reference: 7 July 2021, The BMJ. DOI: 10.1136/bmj.n1446
Bkmk
Debilitating back pain is horribly demoralizing.
Truth. I dealt with it from 1990 thru 2009. Docs wouldn't even do an MRI for the first 7 years. When they did, they didn't do surgery until 2004, then again in 2009.
Since then, I've been fine.
Bkmk
I can’t believe I wrote subscription instead of prescription. Oh well, it’s a good reminder that I need to edit what I write before I post it.
That would suck
I get percs and zanaflex and prednisone as needed.....
But I have to jump through hoops and have clean urine monthly
I have rheumatoid arthritis and regular in my neck any lower back and hands
I go monthly
They’d like surgery on my neck
I’m reluctant
What “cured” most of my back pain was two-fold. One, my wife had half of the town praying for me. The second was that I got out of those reclining office chairs where you slouched back and worked a mouse all day. I went to a drafting table and a bar stool-type chair. A few years later and I was a new man. Well, the laminectomy/ discectomy helped as well.
The reason they won’t prescribe opioids, or so they told me, was because of the Federal DEA will come and basically shut down your offices if they determine that you are overprescribing opioids, while they go over your records to see if you are........................
Yes
Any orthopod or neurologist will send you to a pain management clinic with their rules for pain meds beyond 1-3 months these days if that
Unless you are dying and then they are pretty generous especially with a compassionate oncologist
Notice how like Covid meds they stress side effects.....they always do that
They want you to hurt
Side effects of muscle relaxants ....are pretty mild except for the big ones that are often injected into the site like back neck knee or even guts in the case of amoebic dysentery.....which I had and believe me it worked .....and made u high...the shot
Otherwise worse thing muscle relaxants do is make u sleepy
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