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Screening for Psychological Factors in Patients With Low Back Problems: Waddell's Nonorganic Signs or the majority of patients with low back pain (LBP), the cause of their pain is unknown.' Psychological factors, which may include behavioral, cognitive, or somatoform components, can be just as important as the diagnosis of pathology affecting the low back in a patient's recovery from a low back p r ~ b l e r n . ~A- ~ recent US Agency for Health Care Policy and Research clinical practice guideline recommends exploration of psychological factors when an individual with an acute low back problem is having difficulty regaining his or her tolerance to a~tivity.~ Feuerstein and Beattie5 discussed several biobehavioral instruments that can be used to identify psychological factors in individuals with LBP. If factors are identified that are potential contributors to the low back problem, the physical therapist can then refer the patient to the appropriate professional. Routine application of these instruments, however, may be impractical during physical therapy examinations because of the time required for administration and scoring as well as the expertise needed to interpret the results. Thus, there is a need for a brief screening tool to help identify patients who may require more detailed psychological testing. A review of the description and diagnosis of psychological disorders that may relate to LBP is beyond the scope of this update. For further information on these areas, the reader is referred Signs of organic problems are findings from the physical examination that indicate the presence of pathology or disease. Paresthesia over the lateral border of the foot, for example, is a sign for S1 nerve root involvement. Signs of nonorganic problems, in contrast, are findings that deviate from the usual presentation of d i s e a ~ eBoth . ~ organic and nonorganic signs may be present in a patient with LBP. Therefore, the presence of nonorganic signs should not be equated with malingering or the presence of a psychological problem, but only with the need for further investigation. Scalzitti DA. Screening for psychological factors in patients with low back problems: Waddell's nonorganic signs. Phys Thm. 1997;77:306-312.1 Key Words: Assessment, Low back problems, Nonorganic signs, Psychosocial. David A Scalzitti 306 Physical Therapy. Volume 77 . Number 3 . March 1997 The presence of nonorganic signs Waddell et aI8 described a group of signs that indicate the presence of nonorganic problems for patients with LBP. Waddell has also referred to these signs as "behavTesting for these ioral signs" or "inappropriate ~igns."2.~ signs is performed as part of the physical examination and takes less than 1 r n i n ~ t e Nonorganic .~ signs have been used to describe different characteristics of patients with LBP. The purpose of this update is to describe the use of Waddell's nonorganic signs as a screening tool for psychological factors in patients with LBP. Additionally, the relationship between the nonorganic signs and physical impairments, disability, and treatment outcomes will be discussed. Waddell's Nonorganic Signs In the early 1900s, nonorganic signs were frequently used to detect malingering in patients with LBP.lOJ1As medical and psychological knowledge progressed, it became clear that the diagnosis of malingering may have been based on overly simplistic assumptions, and the use of these nonorganic signs fell out of favor. The modern use of nonorganic signs for patients with low back problems increased greatly after 1980, when Waddell et a18 grouped eight signs into five types. These five types, or categories of signs, are tenderness, simulation, distraction, regional disturbances, and overreaction (Table). Waddell and colleagues investigated 16 other signs, including grip strength, lumbar sensory changes, and pretibial tenderness, but did not include them in their final battery because of poor intertester and intratester reliability, overlap with other signs, and difficulty for the examiner to learn. According to Waddell et al,s a nonorganic sign (an indication of a nonorganic contribution to a patient's low back problem) observed during the physical exami- should alert the clinician to the need for more nation is scored as positive. If a sign is positive, then that type of nonorganic sign is present. One nonorganic sign in comprehensive isolation may be present with some organic contesting. ditions and should therefore be discounted. A sensory regional disturbance, for example, may be present in persons with spinal stenosis with multiple nerve root involvement. Waddell et als found that the presence of three or more types of nonorganic signs correlated with the results of psychological tests indicating problems. According to Waddell et al, the presence of a single sign is not associated with an indication of psychological problems. The presence of three or more types of nonorganic signs has been the most consistently used criterion for the finding of a positive Waddell's nonorganic signs test, although other methods have been proposed.12J3 Unless otherwise specified in this update, therefore, a positive test for nonorganic signs refers to finding the presence of three or more types of nonorganic signs. A negative nonorganic signs test is the finding of only one or two types of signs, although a patient may have more than three nonorganic signs because of multiple signs within a specific type. Reliability Agreement was high (86%) for two examiners in detecting the presence of nonorganic signs in a group of 50 patients with chronic LBP.s Agreement between examinations in the same patients was 85%. (The mean length of time between examinations was 23 days.) McCombe et all4 reported poor intertester reliability between two DA Scalzitti, PT, OCS, is Clinical Instructor, Department of Physical Therapy, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1919 W Taylor St (M/C 898), Chicago, IL. 60612-7251 (USA) ([email protected]),and Specialist in Physical Therapy, Department of Physical Therapy, University of Illinois Hospital, Chicago, IL 60612-7233. Address all correspondence to Mr Scalzitti at the first address. Physical Therapy . Volume 77 . Number 3 . March 1997 Scalzitti . 307 Table. Waddell's Nonorganic Signsa Type of Nonorganic Sign Nonorganic Sign Description Tenderness not related to a particular skeletal or neuromuscular structure; may be either superficial or nonanatomic. Tenderness Superficial The skin in the lumbar region is tender to light pinch over a wide area not associated Nonanatornic Deep tenderness, which is not localized to one structure, is felt over a wide area and often extends to the thoracic spine, sacrum, or pelvis. with the distribution of a posterior primary ramus. These tests give the patient the impression that a particular examination is being carried out when in fact it is not. Simulation tests Axial loading Low back pain is reported when the examiner presses down on the top of the patient's head; neck pain is common and should not be considered indicative of a nonorganic sign. Rotation Back pain is reported when the shoulders and pelvis are passively rotated in the same plane as the patient stands relaxed with the feet together; in the presence of root irritation, leg pain may be produced and should not be considered indicative of a nonorganic sign. A positive physical finding is demonstrated in the routine manner, and this finding is then Distraction tests checked while the patient's attention is distracted; a nonorganic component may be present if the finding disappears when the patient is distracted. Straight leg raising Dysfunction (eg, sensory, motor) involving a widespread region of body parts in a manner that cannot be explained based on anatomy; care must be taken to distinguish from multiple nerve root involvement. Regional disturbances Overreaction The examiner lifts the patient's foot as when testing the plantar reflex in the sitting position; a nonorganic component may be present if the leg is lifted higher than when tested in the supine position. Weakness Demonstrated on testing by a partial cogwheel "giving way" of many muscle groups that cannot be explained on a localized neurologic basis. Sensory Include diminished sensation to light touch, pinprick or other neurologic tests fitting a "stocking" rather than a dermatomal pattern. May take the form of disproportionate verbalization, facial expression, muscle tension and tremor, collapsing, or sweating; judgments should be made with caution, minimizing the examiner's own emotional reaction. "Adapted from Waddell G, McCulloch J.4, Kurnmrl E, Venner RM. Nonorganic physical signs in low-back pain. Spine. 1980;5:117-125. orthopedic surgeons and between a surgeon and a physical therapist in detecting individual nonorganic signs. Confidence intervals of Kappa coefficients included zero for the nonorganic signs of tenderness and regional disturbances, suggesting that agreement was not better than chance. McCombe et al, however, did not examine the reliability of the examiners in determining the presence of three or more nonorganic signs. This finding should caution clinicians regarding the use of positive nonorganic signs in isolation. The nonorganic sign of overreaction requires the clinician to make judgments based on observations of the patient's behavior. The other signs are from tests conducted during routine examinations. The presence of overreaction, therefore, may be more difficult to identify than other nonorganic signs. Several methods and instruments can be used to quantify observation of a patient's behavior during the physical examination.15 308 . Scalzitti Keefe and Block16 described a method for observing overt pain behaviors to provide a means of identifying the presence of guarding, bracing, rubbing, grimacing, and sighing during a physical examination. Waddell and Richardsong obtained a Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient of .65 when examining the relationship between the nonorganic signs test and overt pain behaviors in 120 patients who had LBP for at least 3 months. Measurements obtained with the UAB Pain Behavior Rating Scale, which is one instrument for measuring pain behavior, were also highly correlated ( r =.73) with the results of the nonorganic signs test in 103 patients with LBP.I7 Nonorganic Signs and Psychological Findings In their original study of nonorganic al-eported a correlation between nonorganic signs and scores on the depression, and hysteria scales of the signs, Waddell et the presence of hypochondriasis, Minnesota Multi- Physical Therapy . Volume 77 . Number 3 . March 1997 phasic Personality Inventory. These scales of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory traditionally represent a measure of psychological distress in patients with LBP. In addition, correlations have been found between the presence of nonorganic signs and other psychological instruments, including the disease affirmation and hypochondria1 disturbance scales of the Illness Behavior Questionnaire (IBQ),IRthe Distress and Risk Assessment Method (DR,4M),I9 and pain drawing^.^.^^ Waddell et alRcaution, however, that nonorganic signs should not be overinterpreted and used as substitutes for comprehensive psychological assessment. Instead, they should be used as part of an examination to identify patients who require more detailed testing. with LBP who were seeing an orthopedist for the first time showed three or more nonorganic signs. The authors reported three or more nonorganic signs in 33% of two different samples of patients with chronic LBP a n d in 50% of a third sample of patients with chronic LBP. The three samples of patients had all been off from work for many months with a high incidence of previously failed treatments. No positive tests were detected among subjects without LBP. Factors responsible for the increased occurrence of nonorganic findings in patients with chronic LBP have not been identified. The likelihood of finding three or more nonorganic signs may increase with the duration of the problem or because of the failed treatments. The sensitivity and the specificity of eight psychometric instruments, including Waddell's nonorganic signs test,* for detecting psychological disturbances in patients with LBP were determined in a group of 264 persons.I2 Results from each instrument were compared with a "gold standard" of psychological disturbance, which was defined as a positive response to three or more of the eight psychometric tests. Specificity of the nonorganic signs for correctly identifying patients who were nonpsychologically disturbed was 86% in men and 84% in women. Sensitivity of the nonorganic signs for correctly identifying patients who were psychologically disturbed was 44% in men and 48% in women. This study was limited, however, by the lack of a universal "gold standard" of psychological disturbances with which to compare the different instruments. In the study, measurements with each instrument were compared with a compilation of measurements obtained with the other instruments. Correlations among the eight instruments may not have been found if the instruments were measuring different aspects of psychological disturbances. Nonorganic Signs and Tests of Musculoskeletal Performance Nonorganic contributions to a patient's LBP may coexist with organic contributions. Organic findings may be influenced by nonorganic factors, and in some patients, nonorganic findings may be influenced by organic factors. Waddell et a122 evaluated the relationship between the presence of the nonorganic signs and 27 tests of musculoskeletal impairments in 120 patients with chronic LBP. Reproduction of the patient's pain during hip and knee movements and limitations in passive knee flexion, hip flexion force, hip abduction force, and prone isometric trunk extension were positive more frequently in the patients who had two or more nonorganic signs (29%) than in the patients who had only one or no nonorganic signs (71%). The only impairments not correlated with a nonorganic component were those related to spinal posture and lumbar flexion. Based on these findings, the authors concluded that the physical tests of musculoskeletal impairments that they investigated were better indicators of illness behavior than of physical impairment. Nonorganic Signs and Demographics Age, gender, occupation, or compensation status d o not appear to influence the results of the nonorganic signs test.Wayes et al," however, found nonorganic signs more frequently in patients with LBP who were anticipating or receiving financial compensation as compared with those who were not anticipating or receiving compensation. In this study, however, other factors differed between the two groups of patients. Thus, the role of the nonorganic signs is difficult to assess. Groups of patients with LBP with three or more nonorganic signs performed poorer on tests of force production, range of motion, and motor skills than did groups of patients with LBP without nonorganic signs.2"-'"hese tests included tests of lumbar range of motion and isometric force on an Isostation B-ZOOThf lumbar dynamometert.2"24and tests of lifting, gripping, and physical dexterity o n an ERGOSTMWork Simulator.x." Menard et a12Vound that patients with LBP with nonorganic signs produced lower torques for isometric elbow flexion and isometric knee extension than did patients without nonorganic signs. The authors contended that musculoskeletal performance as measured by dynamometers does not necessarily reflect maximum physical capacity. Low values on any of these tests, The length of time that a patient has had LBP appears to increase the likelihood of finding a positive nonorganic signs test. Waddell et alQeported that 12% of patients 'The seven othrr instrumenrs \+,err a pain drawing. the Slodified Somatic Perception Questionnaire. the Hospital Anxiety Scale, the Hospital Depression Scale, rhr Zung Depression Scale, the Illness Behavior Questionnaire. and a nonorganic svmptoms test Physical Therapy . Volume 77 . Number 3 . March 1997 Isotechnologies Inc, 328 Elizabeth Brady Rd. PO Box 1239, Hillsborough. NC 27278. 'Work Recovery Inc, 2341 S Friebus, Suite 14, Tucson, .42 85713. Scalzitti . 309 however, could not be used to identify individuals with nonorganic problems, because some individuals with a positive nonorganic signs test scored as well as some individuals without nonorganic signs. Cooke et a124 measured force and range of motion in patients with chronic LBP, using a lumbar dynamometer. The same test was repeated after 4 weeks of an active reconditioning exercise program. Patients with a positive nonorganic signs test demonstrated improvements in force that were greater than improvements that might be expected as a result of physiologic changes or a learning effect of the test procedure. The authors suggested that the improved force generation might have been due to alterations in illness behavior rather than to an improvement in physical capacity. Findings that nonorganic components may contribute to measures of musculoskeletal impairments suggest that these measures, which are frequently used by physical therapists for patients with LBP, may also reflect a psychological component of disability. In addition, these data suggest that physical therapists may want to continue measuring musculoskeletal impairments but need to consider the influence of other factors, such as illness behavior, on these tests. Likewise, benefits from treatment focused on physical reconditioning may result in reducing disability by improving an individual's psychological status, and thus his or her tolerance to activity, rather than just improvements in the measurement of musculoskeletal impairments, such as peak torque of the lumbar extensors. patient's work status. A poor surgical outcome in this study was defined as postsurgical episodes of disabling back or leg pain, chronic use of narcotic medications, further surgery, or inability to return to work. Relief from pain and reduced disability depended on the presence of an accurate diagnosis of a surgically treatable pathological condition without the presence of nonorganic signs. Outcomes of nonsurgical treatments of patients with LBP have also been influenced by the presence of nonorganic signs. Lehmann et also found that electroacupuncture treatment of patients with chronic LBP who had three or more nonorganic signs was no more effective for pain reduction than a sham treatment. In contrast, the authors found that treatment of patients with electroacupuncture, in the absence of nonorganic signs, resulted in a greater decrease in pain than did the sham treatments. Patients with illness behavior as measured by the presence of nonorganic signs, nonorganic symptoms, and a pain drawing received more treatments than did patients who did not exhibit illness behavior in a study by Waddell et al.31 These treatments included medication use, lumbar injections, orthopedic supports, physical therapy, spinal manipulation, and bed rest. Based on this finding, a clinician should seriously consider whether there is overutilization of treatments when patients who test positive for nonorganic signs show no progress. For these patients, treatment might be directed toward addressing the illness behavior. Relationship Between Nonorganic Signs and Treatment Outcomes Ability of Nonorganic Signs to Predict Return to Work Nonorganic phenomena can interact with expected treatment outcomes in patients with LBP. Several investigators"-29 have described poorer results from lumbar surgery in patients with nonorganic signs. McCull0ch2~ found that 97 of 109 patients with a nonorganic compe nent who underwent chemonucleolysis continued to have back or leg pain that prevented their return to full activity. One hundred eighty-six of 327 patients without nonorganic signs, in contrast, were free of pain or had minimal limitations in activity following the chymopapain injection. Dzioba and DoxeyZ8found that only 49% of patients with two or more nonorganic signs were approved to return to work by a physician 12 months after various forms of lumbar surgery, as compared with 78% of patients who had only one or no nonorganic signs following surgery. A common goal in the rehabilitation of workers with LBP is to return them to work. There is conflicting evidence about the ability to use nonorganic signs for predicting return to work. Bradish et a132reported that a positive nonorganic signs test at initial assessment in a group of workers with a low back injury (N= 120) did not correlate with work status between 12 and 18 months after injury. In contrast, 0hlund et all7 found a relationship (r=.34) between nonorganic signs and the time needed by a group of automobile workers (N=103) to return to work. In this study, return to work was defined as the return to the same job at least half-time. In a prospective study by Waddell et al,Z9 psychological factors, including the presence of a positive test for nonorganic signs, correlated with a poor surgical outcome, as assessed by a physician, the patient, and the 3 10 . Scalzitti , ~a~study of 134 patients with Lancourt and K e t t e l h ~ tin LBP, found that the nonorganic signs of axial loading, simulated rotation, distraction, and a sensory regional disturbance were among the factors that were better predictors of return to work than were ankle and knee reflexes, motor loss, and sensory loss in a dermatomal pattern. This relationship was seen for patients who returned to work within the first 6 months after injury Physical Therapy . Volume 77 . Number 3 . March 1997 but not for patients who were off work for greater than 6 months. Recently, KummelS4described two new nonorganic signs: lumbar pain during isolated cervical movement and lumbar pain limiting active shoulder movement. The presence of these two signs in addition to the presence of three or more of Waddell's nonorganic signs improved the ability to predict patients who failed to return to work in this retrospective study of 717 patients. The treatment received by injured workers may influence their return to work. Werneke et all3 evaluated a physical conditioning program designed to meet each patient's job requirement for 170 workers with LBP. One hundred fifteen of the patients showed work status improvement within 3 months of completing the program. At least one nonorganic sign was present in 47% of the patients whose work status did not improve, as compared with 12% of the patients who demonstrated improvement. The number of nonorganic signs present at discharge from the program was reduced for 82% of the patients whose work status improved. In contrast to the high su.ccess rate from physical conditioning, when patients with nonorganic findings received treatments described as "symptomatic and at the discretion of the physician," less than 40% returned to work.92 Other factors, besides the presence of nonorganic signs, may influence an injured worker returning to previous job duties. Waddell et alZ9 found return to work after lumbar surgery was predicted by physical, psychological, and occupational factors. Physical therapists should consider the relationship of these factors in the treatment of injured workers. The referral to an appropriate professional or multidisciplinary team should be made for management of any confounding factors when a patient's work tolerance fails to improve from physical therapy. as a malingerer does little to help the patient enhance his or her tolerance for activity. Instead, the factors that are limiting the patient from recovering his or her tolerance for activity should be identified, and interventions should be targeted toward modification of the limiting factom5 Classification of movement dysfunction in patients with LBP may help clinicians to identify individuals who will benefit from specific treatments. Failure to account for the presence of nonorganic findings may lead to the misclassification of patients, because nonorganic factors may influence patients' performance on tests used to classify them. Delitto et a135 screen for nonorganic signs in their treatment-based classification scheme and suggest referral to an appropriate practitioner when screening is positive. Marras et alS6developed a classification scheme for patients with low back disorders based on the higher derivatives of trunk velocity. Using this method, Marras et a1 found that patients with nonorganic findings were distinguishable from patients in nine other low back disorder categories. The utility of Waddell's nonorganic signs has been described for patients with LBP. To date, nonorganic signs tests for musculoskeletal problems in other regions of the body are not commonly used. Development of nonorganic signs tests for patients with other musculoskeletal problems may help to guide management of these patients. Nonorganic signs are found more frequently in persons with chronic LBP as compared with persons with acute LBP. Further investigation may reveal how nonorganic behaviors increase and develop in patients with chronic LBP. Treatment focused on prevention of the development of nonorganic signs may reduce the occurrence of chronic LBP and back-related disability. Clinical Implications A physical problem may coexist with the presence of nonorganic signs. Thus, the presence of nonorganic signs does riot eliminate the need for a complete physical examination. A patient with a cauda equina syndrome, for example, may be classified as exhibiting nonorganic behavior based on sensory and motor losses and overreaction to the examination because of the intensity of symptoms. Physical examination, however, should identify the structural etiology of the problem, and appropriate treatment should be directed toward the pathological condition. According to Waddell et al,8 nonorganic signs by themselves should not be equated with malingering or the presence of a psychological problem. Rather, the finding of nonorganic signs should alert the clinician to the need for more comprehensive testing. Labeling a patient Physical Therapy . Volume 77 . Number 3 . March 1997 Summary The role of Waddell's nonorganic signs test as a screening tool for psychological factors in the examination of patients with low back problems has been described. The presence of nonorganic signs should alert the physical therapist to the need for additional psychological tests and should not necessarily be considered an indicator of malingering. Nonorganic signs may coexist with organic findings. An illness behavior role of the nonorganic signs is suggested, as they have been related with disability in addition to physical impairments. Physical therapy management for these patients should focus on treatment of illness behavior and on combating disability. Scalzitti . 3 1 1 Acknowledgments I thank Louise J White, PT, and Pamela J Woodall, PT, for their kind assistance with the preparation of this update. References 1 Spitzer WO. Diagnosis of the problem (the problem of diagnosis): scientific approach to the assessment and management of activityrelated spinal disorders-a monograph for clinicians: report of the Quebec Task Force on Spinal Disorders. Spine. 1987;12:S16-S21. 2 Waddell G, Main CJ, Morris EW, et al. Chronic low-back pain, psychologic distress, and illness behavior. Spine. 1984;9:209-213. 3 Delitto A. Are measures of function and disability important in low back care? Phys Ther. 1994;74:452-462. 4 Bigos S, Bowyer 0 , Braen G, et al. Acute Low Back Problems in Adults: Clinical Practice Guideline No. 14. Rockville, Md: Agency for Health Care Policy and Research, Public Health Service, US Department of Health and Human Services; 1994. AHCPR publication 95-0642. 5 Feuerstein M, Beattie P. 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Comparison of eight psychometric instruments in unselected patients with back pain. Spine. 1991;16: 1068-1074. 19 Main CJ, Wood PLR, Hollis S, et al. The Distress and Risk Assessment Method: a simple patient classification to identify distress and evaluate the risk of poor outcome. Spine 1992;17:42-52. 20 Chan CW, Goldman S, Ilstrup DM, et al. The pain drawing and Waddell's nonorganic physical signs in chronic low-back pain. Spine. 1993;18:1717-1722. 21 Hayes B, Solyom CAE, Wing PC, Berkowitz J. Use of psychometric measures and nonorganic signs testing in detecting nomogenic disorders in low back pain patients. Spine 1993;18:1254-1262, 22 Waddell G, Somerville D, Henderson I, Newton M. Objective clinical evaluation of physical impairment in chronic low back pain. Spine. 1992;17:617-628. 23 Hirsch G, Beach G, Cooke C, et al. Relationship between performance o n lumbar dynamometry and Waddell score in a population with low-back pain. Spine. 1991;16:1039-1043. 24 Cooke C, Menard MR, Beach GN, et al. Serial lumbar dynamometry in low back pain. Spine. 1992;17:653-662. 25 Cooke C, Dusik LA, Menard MR, et al. Relationship of performance on the ERGOS work simulator to illness behavior in a workers' compensation population with low back versus limb injury. J Occup Med. 1994;36:757-762. 26 Menard MR, Cooke C, Locke SR, et al. Pattern of performance in workers with low back pain during a comprehensive motor performance evaluation. Spine. 1994;19:1359 -1 366. 27 McCulloch JA. Chemonucleolysis.] Bone Joint Surg [Br]. 1977;59:4552. 28 Dzioba RB, Doxey NC. A prospective investigation into the orthopaedic and psychologic predictors of outcome of first lumbar surgery following industrial injury. Spine. 1984;9:614-623. 29 Waddell G, Morris EW, Di Paola MP, et al. A concept of illness tested as an improved basis for surgical decisions in low-back disorders. Spine. 1986;11:712-719. 30 Lehmann TR, Russell DW, Spratt KF. The impact of patients with nonorganic physical findings on a controlled trial of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation and electroacupuncture. Spine. 1983;8: 625-634. 31 Waddell G, Birchner M, Finlayson D, Main CJ. Symptoms and signs: physical disease or illness behaviour? BMJ. 1984;289:739-741. 13 Werneke MW, Harris DE, Lichter RL. Clinical effectiveness of behavioral signs for screening chronic low-back pain patients in a work-oriented physical rehabilitation program. Spine. 1993;18:24122418. 32 Bradish CF, Lloyd GJ, Aldam CH, et al. Do nonorganic signs help to predict the return to activity of patients with low-back pain? Spine. 1988;13:557-560. 14 McCombe PF,'~airbankJCT, Cockersole BC, Pynsent PB. Reproducibilit~of physical signs in low-back pain. Spine. 1989;14:908-918. 33 Lancourt J, Kettelhut M. Predicting return to work for lower back pain patients receiving worker's compensation. Spine. 1992;17:629640. 15 Solomon PE. Measurement of pain behaviour. Physiotherapy Canada. 1996;48:52-58. 16 Keefe FJ, Block AR. Development of an observation method for assessing pain behavior in chronic low back pain patients. Behau Ther. 1982;13:363-375. 17 0hlund C, Lindstrom I, Areskoug B, et al. Pain behavior in industrial subacute low back pain, part I: reliability-concurrent and predictive validity of pain behavior assessments. Pain. 1994;58:201-209. 34 Kummel BM. Nonorganic signs of significance in low back pain. Spine. 1996;21:1077-1081. 35 Delitto A, Erhard RE, Boling RW. A treatment-based classification approach to low back syndrome: identifying and staging patients for conservative treatment. Phys Ther. 1995;75:470-489. 36 Marras WS, Parnianpour M, Ferguson SA, et al. The classification of anatomic- and symptom-based low back disorders using motion measure models. Spine. 1995;20:2531-2546. 18 Waddell G, Pilowsky I, Bond IMR. Clinical assessment and interpretation of abnormal, illness behaviour in low back pain. Pain. 1989;39: 41-53. Physical Therapy. Volume 7 7 . Number 3 . March 1997