- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#22861
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (E)
Chronic back pain is usually caused by damage to the spinal disk that occurs years before such pain develops. According to the last sentence of the stimulus, a contributing factor to the onset of chronic back pain among people over the age of 30 is the deterioration of the abdominal muscles caused by insufficient exercise.
Answer choice (A): Just because one person out of five has a damaged spinal disk guarantees neither that this person will develop chronic back pain, nor that others will avoid it. It is entirely possible some spinal disk injuries do not lead to chronic back pain; likewise, it is also possible that other conditions such as obesity or bad posture also cause chronic back pain.
Answer choice (B): While regular exercise may be necessary to delay or forestall the onset of chronic back pain among those with injured spinal disks, there is no evidence that exercising is sufficient to prevent back pain. Furthermore, causes for chronic back pain other than injured spinal disks might not be manageable by exercise at all. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): While in most cases the disk will have been damaged years before the pain develops, it is entirely possible that in some cases chronic pain develops a lot sooner. Furthermore, even if chronic pain always took years to develop, answer choice (C) only talks about "mild and fleeting" back pain. It is quite possible that many patients experience such pain at the time their spinal disks are injured, since "mild and fleeting" back pain is not the same as "chronic" pain.
Answer choice (D): While doctors may be able to predict which spinal disk patients will develop back pain (e.g. those who fail to exercise), there is no way to make a similar prediction if the group consists of ordinary people without chronic back pain. At best, doctors may be able to diagnose the 30+ year olds who have herniated or degenerated spinal disks but show no symptoms (usually, one in five will fall into that category). However, since injured spinal disks may not be the singular cause of chronic back pain, it is impossible to estimate who else will ultimately develop back pain.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. If insufficient exercise is a contributing factor to the onset of chronic back pain among people with injured spinal disks, it follows that exercising represents a strategy that can be effective in delaying or preventing the onset of pain.
Notice the degree of likelihood expressed by the correct answer choice: "there is a strategy that can be effective in delaying" the onset of pain. Proving that a certain outcome is possible is a lot easier than proving that this outcome is certain. Extreme language is rarely the hallmark of a good Must Be True answer.
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (E)
Chronic back pain is usually caused by damage to the spinal disk that occurs years before such pain develops. According to the last sentence of the stimulus, a contributing factor to the onset of chronic back pain among people over the age of 30 is the deterioration of the abdominal muscles caused by insufficient exercise.
Answer choice (A): Just because one person out of five has a damaged spinal disk guarantees neither that this person will develop chronic back pain, nor that others will avoid it. It is entirely possible some spinal disk injuries do not lead to chronic back pain; likewise, it is also possible that other conditions such as obesity or bad posture also cause chronic back pain.
Answer choice (B): While regular exercise may be necessary to delay or forestall the onset of chronic back pain among those with injured spinal disks, there is no evidence that exercising is sufficient to prevent back pain. Furthermore, causes for chronic back pain other than injured spinal disks might not be manageable by exercise at all. This answer choice is incorrect.
Answer choice (C): While in most cases the disk will have been damaged years before the pain develops, it is entirely possible that in some cases chronic pain develops a lot sooner. Furthermore, even if chronic pain always took years to develop, answer choice (C) only talks about "mild and fleeting" back pain. It is quite possible that many patients experience such pain at the time their spinal disks are injured, since "mild and fleeting" back pain is not the same as "chronic" pain.
Answer choice (D): While doctors may be able to predict which spinal disk patients will develop back pain (e.g. those who fail to exercise), there is no way to make a similar prediction if the group consists of ordinary people without chronic back pain. At best, doctors may be able to diagnose the 30+ year olds who have herniated or degenerated spinal disks but show no symptoms (usually, one in five will fall into that category). However, since injured spinal disks may not be the singular cause of chronic back pain, it is impossible to estimate who else will ultimately develop back pain.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. If insufficient exercise is a contributing factor to the onset of chronic back pain among people with injured spinal disks, it follows that exercising represents a strategy that can be effective in delaying or preventing the onset of pain.
Notice the degree of likelihood expressed by the correct answer choice: "there is a strategy that can be effective in delaying" the onset of pain. Proving that a certain outcome is possible is a lot easier than proving that this outcome is certain. Extreme language is rarely the hallmark of a good Must Be True answer.