AUTHOR=Fischer Lukas , Schroll Arno , Schmidt Hendrik , Arampatzis Adamantios TITLE=Sex-specific trunk movement coordination in participants with low-back pain and asymptomatic controls JOURNAL=Frontiers in Sports and Active Living VOLUME=Volume 7 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/sports-and-active-living/articles/10.3389/fspor.2025.1524489 DOI=10.3389/fspor.2025.1524489 ISSN=2624-9367 ABSTRACT=BackgroundTrunk posture and lumbo-pelvic coordination can influence spinal loading and are commonly used as clinical measures in the diagnosis and management of low-back pain and injury risk. However, sex and pain specific characteristics have rarely been investigated in a large cohort of both healthy individuals and low-back pain patients. It has also been suggested that the motor control of trunk stability and trunk movement variability is altered in individuals with low-back pain, with possible implications for pain progression. Nonetheless, clear links to low-back pain are currently lacking.ObjectiveTo investigate trunk posture, lumbo-pelvic coordination, trunk dynamic stability and trunk movement variability in an adequately large cohort of individuals with low-back pain and asymptomatic controls and to explore specific effects of sex, pain intensity and pain chronicity.MethodsWe measured lumbo-pelvic kinematics during trunk flexion and trunk dynamic stability and movement variability during a cyclic pointing task in 306 adults (156 females) aged between 18 and 64 years, reporting either no low-back pain or pain in the lumbar area of the trunk. Participants were grouped based on their characteristic pain intensity as asymptomatic (ASY, N = 53), low to medium pain (LMP, N = 185) or medium to high pain (MHP, N = 68). Participants with low-back pain that persisted for 12 weeks or longer were categorized as chronic (N = 104). Data were analyzed using linear mixed models in the style of a two way anova.ResultsFemale participants showed a higher range of motion in both the trunk and pelvis during trunk flexion, as well as an increased lumbar lordosis in standing attributed to a higher pelvic angle that persisted throughout the entire trunk flexion movement, resulting in a longer duration of lumbar lordosis. The intensity and chronicity of the pain had a negligible effect on trunk posture and the lumbo-pelvic coordination. Pain chronicity had an effect on trunk dynamic stability (i.e., increased trunk instability), while no effects of sex and pain intensity were detected in trunk dynamic stability and movement variability.ConclusionsLow-back pain intensity and chronicity was not associated with lumbo-pelvic posture and kinematics, indicating that lumbo-pelvic posture and kinematics during a trunk flexion movement have limited practicality in the clinical diagnosis and management of low-back pain. On the other hand, the increased local instability of the trunk during the cyclic coordination task studied indicates control errors in the regulation of trunk movement in participants with chronic low-back pain and could be considered a useful diagnostic tool in chronic low-back pain.