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ARTICLE |

CONSERVATIVE MANAGEMENT OF "LOW BACK SYNDROME" FREE

Otto Kestler, M.D.
[+] Author Affiliations

[ill]w York

Associate Attending Orthopedic Surgeon, Hospital for Joint Diseases.


JAMA. 1960;172(18):2039-2043. doi:10.1001/jama.1960.03020180049009
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The effectiveness of a new muscle relaxant, carisoprodol, was tested in a study of 212 patients with pain, immobility, and muscle spasm in the lower part of the back. Conservative treatment, which included analgesic drugs and physical therapy, was used in a contratest group of 106 patients; the test group of 106 other patients received the conservative treatment plus carisoprodol. The initial dosage of carisoprodol was generally one 400-mg. tablet four times daily. The patients treated with carisoprodol returned to work in about one-quarter the time it took the conventionally treated patients. An equally striking difference was observed in a smaller study in which a contratest group of 35 patients received placebos. Six case histories illustrate the types of situation in which a relaxant drug can be expected to relieve the "low back syndrome."

REFERENCES

Berger, F. M., and others:  Unusual Muscle Relaxant and Analgesic Properties of N-Isopropyl-2-Methyl-2-Propyl1, 3-Propanediol Dicarbamate (Carisoprodol ), J. Pharmacol. & Exper. Therap. 127:66-74 ( (Sept.) ) 1959;.

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Berger, F. M., and others:  Unusual Muscle Relaxant and Analgesic Properties of N-Isopropyl-2-Methyl-2-Propyl1, 3-Propanediol Dicarbamate (Carisoprodol ), J. Pharmacol. & Exper. Therap. 127:66-74 ( (Sept.) ) 1959;.
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