About this Research Topic
Human movement is controlled by the central nervous system and its muscle actuators. Thus, the scientific blending of biomechanics and motor control provides powerful methods to explore and learn more about the fundamental mechanisms underlying movement of the spine and trunk. Despite the high quality research that has been performed and published in this and other fields related to low back pain, the global prevalence of low back pain still persists at a level relatively unchanged. Clearly, more work focused on the patterns and control of movement in both healthy and well-defined patient populations is needed to more completely elucidate: 1) potential predisposing factors and triggers for dysfunction and/or pain; 2) potential strategies to both prevent and rehabilitate dysfunction and/or pain; and 3) methods to quantify and identify individuals who can most benefit from specific movement and motor control-based preventative and rehabilitative strategies.
Therefore, we are making a call for scientific papers with a focus on ‘Strategies for controlling movement of the spine in healthy and low back pain populations’. Specifically, we would like to see mechanistic studies that quantify and describe how the spine moves under different conditions for both healthy and low back populations, with a longer-term objective to bring us closer to realizing the three goals described in the previous paragraph. Focus of the papers could be on (but not necessarily limited to) kinematic patterns, dynamical systems, and mechanisms of control. Different experimental conditions could focus on any factors (internal or external) that influence how individuals move and/or control movement of their spines.
Keywords: spine biomechanics, low-back pain, human movement, rehabilitation, kinematic patterns
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.