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Effects of Vertebral Axial Loading Walking Combined With Core Stabilization Exercises in Individuals With Chronic Low Back Pain
Sponsor: Hacettepe University
Summary
Chronic low back pain is a common musculoskeletal condition persisting for more than three months and is associated with pain, functional limitations, impaired balance, altered proprioception, reduced trunk muscle performance, and decreased quality of life. Previous studies have demonstrated that individuals with chronic low back pain exhibit altered sensory input from spinal structures and impaired neuromuscular control, which may contribute to persistent pain and movement dysfunction. Although exercise-based physiotherapy approaches, particularly core stabilization exercises, are widely recommended and effective in the management of chronic low back pain, sensory deficits related to balance, proprioception, and body awareness are often insufficiently addressed in conventional rehabilitation programs. Vertebral axial loading walking training is a functional rehabilitation approach involving slow, controlled walking under gentle vertical loading applied along the spinal axis. This intervention is thought to enhance afferent sensory input from spinal mechanoreceptors, potentially improving balance control, proprioception, and motor coordination. This randomized controlled study aims to investigate the effects of adding vertebral axial loading walking training to a standard core stabilization exercise program on pain intensity, balance, proprioception, trunk muscle strength and endurance, and body awareness in individuals with chronic low back pain.
Official title: Investigation of the Effects of Vertebral Axial Loading Walking Training Added to Core Stabilization Exercises on Pain, Trunk Sensory Function, Muscle Strength and Endurance, Balance, and Proprioception in Patients With Chronic Low Back Pain
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
30 Years - 55 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
20
Start Date
2026-01-19
Completion Date
2026-07-15
Last Updated
2026-02-02
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Exercise - Core Stabilization Exercise Program
Participants receive a physiotherapist-supervised core stabilization exercise program applied three sessions per week for six weeks. Before training, participants are educated about core muscle function and taught the abdominal bracing maneuver. Exercises are performed with neutral spinal alignment and controlled diaphragmatic breathing. Each session includes warm-up and cool-down exercises. The program consists of deep abdominal muscle activation, lower extremity movements with maintained trunk stability, bridging exercises, modified curl-up, and quadruped stabilization exercises. Exercises are demonstrated by the physiotherapist, performed with progressive repetitions, and corrected using verbal and manual feedback. The training is supervised by a physiotherapist and applied three sessions per week for six weeks.
Core Stabilization Exercises Plus Vertebral Axial Loading Walking Training
Participants receive the same core stabilization exercise program combined with vertebral axial loading proprioceptive walking training. Axial loading is applied through the vertex of the head using external weights ranging from 50 to 250 grams, adjusted according to individual tolerance. Walking is performed at a constant slow pace using a metronome set at 72 beats per minute. The initial walking distance is 40 meters and is progressively increased by 20 meters per week, reaching up to 140 meters. The intervention is supervised by a physiotherapist and applied three sessions per week for six weeks.
Locations (1)
Hacettepe University, Faculty of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation
Ankara, Turkey (Türkiye)