A cohort study of sciatic pain and measures of internal spinal load in professional drivers

In a prospective cohort study of 537 male professional drivers, the occurrence of sciatic pain showed stronger associations with measures of internal lumbar load expressed in terms of daily compressive dose, Sed (MPa), and risk factor, R (non-dimensional), according to ISO/WD 2631-5 (2013), than with measures of daily vibration exposure calculated as either 8-h energy-equivalent frequency-weighted acceleration (ms-2 r.m.s.) or vibration dose value (ms-1.75) according to the EU Directive on mechanical vibration (2002). Herniated lumbar disc, previous lumbar trauma and physical work load were also powerful predictors of the occurrence of sciatic pain over time. Psychosocial work environment was poorly associated with sciatic pain. The boundary values of risk factor (R) for low and high probabilities of adverse health effects on the lumbar spine, as proposed by international standard ISO/WD 2631-5 (2013), tend to underestimate the health risk in professional drivers.

The complete article "A cohort study of sciatic pain and measures of internal spinal load in professional drivers" can be downloaded at the website of the Journal "Ergonomics", Volume 58, Issue 7, pp. 1088-1102 (charges may apply).

First Online: 30 July 2014

Bibliographic information

Title:  A cohort study of sciatic pain and measures of internal spinal load in professional drivers. 

Written by:  M. Bovenzi, M. Schust, G. Menzel, J. Hofmann, B. Hinz

in: Ergonomics, Volume 58, Issue 7, 2015.  pages: 1088-1102, Project number: F 2257, DOI: 10.1080/00140139.2014.943302

Further Information

Research Project

Project numberF 2257 StatusCompleted Project Relation between risk values based on internal spinal forces and epidemiological outcomes due to long-term whole-body vibrations

To the Project

Research completed