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Low Back Pain

Low Back Pain. NP Outreach Curriculum in Rheumatology St. Joseph’s Health Care, London, ON Dr. Sherry Rohekar November 12, 2009. An Important Issue. One of the most common reasons for seeking medical attention, second only to respiratory issues

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Low Back Pain

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  1. Low Back Pain NP Outreach Curriculum in Rheumatology St. Joseph’s Health Care, London, ON Dr. Sherry Rohekar November 12, 2009

  2. An Important Issue • One of the most common reasons for seeking medical attention, second only to respiratory issues • 84% of adults will have low back pain at some point • Wide variety of approaches for treatment • Suggests that optimal approach is unsure • Most episodes are self-limited • Some suffer from chronic or recurrent courses, with substantial impact on quality of life

  3. Epidemiology • Almost any structure in the back can cause pain, including ligaments, joints, periosteum, musculature, blood vessels, annulus fibrosus and nerves • Intervertebral discs and facet joints most commonly affected • 85% of those with isolated low back pain do not have a clear localization • Usually called “strain” or “sprain”  no histopathology, no anatomical location • Men and women equally affected • Age of onset 30-50 years

  4. Epidemiology • Leading cause of work disability in those < 45 years • Most expensive cause of work disability in terms of worker’s compensation • Multiple known risk factors: • Heavy lifting, twisting, vibration, obesity, poor conditioning

  5. Common Pathoanatomical Conditions of the Lumbar Spine Deyo R and Weinstein J. N Engl J Med 2001;344:363-370

  6. DifferentialDiagnosis of Low Back Pain Deyo R and Weinstein J. N Engl J Med 2001;344:363-370

  7. History • Any evidence of systemic disease? • Age (especially >50), hx of cancer, unexplained weight loss, IVDU, chronic infection • Duration • Presence of nocturnal pain • Response to therapy • Many patients with infection or malignancy will not have relief when lying down • Note for arthritis patients – young age, nocturnal pain and worsening with rest are common in AS

  8. History • Any evidence of neurologic compromise? • Cauda equina syndrome is a medical emergency • Usually due to tumor or massive herniation compressing the nerves of the cauda equina • Urinary retention with overflow, saddle anesthesia, bilateral sciatica, leg weakness, fecal incontinence • Sciatica caused by nerve root irritation • Sharp/burning pain down posterior or lateral leg to foot or ankle; can be associated with numbness/tingling • If due to disc herniation often worsens with cough, sneeze or performing the Valsalva

  9. History • Any evidence of neurologic compromise? • Spinal stenosis is caused by narrowing of the spinal canal, nerve root canals, or intervertebral foramina • Most commonly due to bony hypertrophic changes in facet joints and thickening of the ligamentum flavum • Disc bulging or spondylolisthesis may also cause • Back pain, transient leg tingling, pain in calf and lower extremity that is triggered by ambulation and improved with rest • Can differentiate from vascular claudication through detection of normal arterial pulses on exam

  10. Physical Examination • Inspection of back and posture (ie. Scoliosis, kyphosis) • Range of motion • Palpation of the spine (vertebral tenderness sensitive for infection) • If high suspicion of malignancy, do a breast/prostate/lymph node exam • Peripheral pulses to distinguish from vascular claudication

  11. Physical Examination • Straight leg raise: for those with sciatica or spinal stenosis symptoms • Patient supine, examiner holds patient’s leg straight • Elevation of less than 60 degrees abnormal and suggests compression or irritation of nerve roots • Reproduces sciatica symptoms (NOT just hamstring) • Ipsilateral straight leg raise sensitive but not specific for herniated disk • Crossed straight leg raise (symptoms of sciatica reproduced when opposite leg is raised) insensitive byt highly specific

  12. Physical examination • Neurologic examination • L5: ankle and great toe dorsiflexion • S1: plantar flexion, ankle reflex • Dermatomal sensory loss • L5: numbness medial foot and web space between 1st and 2nd toes • S1: lateral foot/ankle

  13. Imaging • AP and lateral L-spine if no clinical improvement after 4-6 weeks • Guidelines for American College of Physicians and American Pain Society: “Clinicians should not routinely obtain imaging or other diagnostic tests in patients with nonspecific low back pain” • Do perform x-rays if: fever, unexplained weight loss, hx of cancer, neurologic deficits, EtOH, IVDU, age <18 or >50, trauma, immunosuppression, prolonged steroid use, skin/urinary infection, indwelling catheter

  14. Imaging • CT and MRI • More sensitive for detection of infection and cancer than plain films • Also able to image herniated discs and spinal stenosis, which cannot be appreciated on plain films • Beware: herniated/bulging discs often found in asymptomatic volunteers  may lead to overdiagnosis/overtreatment • MRI better than CT for detection of infection, metastases, rare neural tumours

  15. Natural History • Most recover rapidly • 90% of patients seen within 3 days of symptom onset recovered within 2 weeks • Recurrences are common • Most have chronic disease with intermittent exacerbations • Spinal stenosis is the exception  usually gets progressively worse with time

  16. Therapy • Non-specific low back pain • Few RCTs; methodology of studies generally poor quality • NSAIDs and muscle relaxants good for symptomatic relief • Try giving regular rather than prn • Spinal manipulation (ie. chiropractic) of limited utility in studies • Should recommend rapid return to normal activities with neither bed rest nor exercise in the acute period • Bed rest found to not improve and may delay recovery • Exercises not useful in acute phase; use in chronic

  17. Therapy • Nonspecific low back pain • Traction, facet joint injections, TENS ineffective or minimally effective • Systematic reviews of acupunture have shown little benefit • ? Massage therapy  some promising results • Surgery only effective for sciatica, spinal stenosis or spondylolisthesis

  18. Therapy • Herniated intervertebral discs • Nonsurgical treatment for at least a month • Exceptions: cauda equina syndrome, progressive neurologic deficits • Early treatment same as for nonspecific low back pain, but may need short courses of narcotics for pain control • Bed rest not useful • Some patients benefit from epidural corticosteroid injections • If severe pain, neurologic defecits  MRI and consider surgery

  19. Therapy • Spinal stenosis • Physiotherapy to reduce risk of falls • Analgesics, NSAIDs, epidural corticosteroids (no clinical trials) • Decompressive laminecotomy • Spinal fusion + decompression if there is additional spondylolisthesis • Symptoms often recur, even after successful surgery

  20. Therapy • Chronic low back pain • Intensive exercise improves function and reduces pain, but is difficult to adhere to • Anti-depressants: many with chronic low back pain are also depressed • ? Maybe for those without depression (tricyclics) • Opiates • Small RCT showed better effect on pain and mood than NSAIDs • No improvement in actity • Significant side effects: drowsiness, constipation, nausea

  21. Therapy • Chronic low back pain • Referral to multidisciplinary pain center • Cognitive-behavioural therapy, education, exercise, selective nerve blocks • Surgical procedures rarely helpful

  22. SeronegativeSpondyloarthritis

  23. Introduction • Spondyloarthritis • Refers to inflammatory changes involving the spine and the spinal joints. • Remember – can sometimes have peripheral arthritis without spinal symptoms! • Seronegative Spondyloarthritis • Absence of Rheumatoid Factor • Psoriatic Arthritis • Ankylosing Spondylitis • Reactive Arthritis • Enteropathic Arthritis • Undifferentiated Spondyloarthropathy

  24. How do you differentiate inflammatory from mechanical back pain?

  25. Inflammatory vs. Mechanical Back Pain • Inflammatory • Mechanical • Age of onset < 40 • Insidious onset • > 3 months duration • > 60 min am stiffness • Nocturnal pain • Improves with activity • Tenderness over SI joints • Loss of mobility in all planes • Decreased chest expansion • Unlikely to have neurologic deficits • Any age • Acute onset • < 4 weeks duration • < 30 min am stiffness • No nocturnal pain • Worse with activity • No SI joint tenderness • Abnormal flexion • Normal chest expansion • Possible neurologic deficits

  26. Clinical Features

  27. Sacroiliitis • Usually bilateral and symmetric • Initially involves the synovial-lined lower 2/3 of the SI joint • Earliest change: erosion on the iliac side of SI joint (cartilage is thinner) • Could cause “pseudowidening” of SI joint • Bony sclerosis, then complete bony ankylosis or fusion

  28. Spinal Involvement

  29. Spinal Involvement • Gradual ossification of the outer layers of the annulus fibrosis (Sharpey’s fibers) form interverterbral bony bridges • Called syndesmophytes • Fusion of the apophyseal joints and calcification of the spinal ligaments along with bilateral syndesmophyte formation can result in “bamboo spine”

  30. Enthesitis • Enthesis: site of insertion of ligament, tendon or articular capsule into bone • Enthesitis: inflammation of enthesis resulting in new bone formation or fibrosis • Common sites: SI joints, intervertebral discs, manubriosternal joints, symphysis pubis, iliac crests, trochanters, patellae, clavicles, calcanei (Achille’s or plantar fasciitis)

  31. More Than Just Back Pain . . . • “ANK SPOND” • A Aortic insufficiency, ascending aortitis, conduction abnormalities, pericarditis • N Neurologic: atlantoaxial subluxation and cauda equina syndrome • K Kidney: amyloidosis, chronic prostatitis • S Spine: Cervical fracture, spinal stenosis, spinal osteoporosis

  32. More Than Just Back Pain . . . • P Pulmonary: upper lobe fibrosis, restrictive changes • O Ocular: anterior uveitis (25-30% of patients) • N Nephropathy (IgA) • D Discitis or spondylodiscitis • Also: microscopic colitis in terminal ileum and colon (30-60%)

  33. More Than Just Back Pain . . . • Remember that patients with AS can also have a peripheral arthritis • Usually an oligoarthritis of the lower extremities • Occasionally, patients will present with peripheral arthritis before they have back complaints

  34. Physical Exam • Schober test • Detects limitation in forward flexion of the lumbar spine • Place mark at dimples of Venus (or level of the posterio superior iliac spine) and another 10 cm above, at the midline • Ask patient to maximally forward flex with locked knees • Measure should increase from 10 cm to at least 15 cm

  35. Modified Schober Test

  36. Making The Diagnosis

  37. Treatment • Physiotherapy for all • Maintains good posture • Maintains chest expansion • Minimizes deformities

  38. Treatment • NSAIDs • Good for mild symptoms • Potentially disease modifying • Indomethacin seems to work the best • Beware of side effects, especially gastrointestinal disease

  39. Treatment • DMARDs • Sulfasalazine 1000-2000 mg bid • Seems to be the most effective for spinal symptoms • Methotrexate 15-25 mg weekly • For patients with prominent peripheral arthritis • Doesn’t work very well for spinal symptoms

  40. Treatment • Steroids • Not very effective at all in AS • Local injections for enthesitis or peripheral arthritis • Anti-TNFα agents • Remicade (infliximab), Enbrel (etanercept) and Humira (adalimumab) • Very useful for treating symptoms, improving ROM, improving fatigue • Hopefully disease-modifying . . .

  41. Any questions?

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