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Lower Back Pain

Lower Back Pain . MS3 Sports Medicine Workshop. Objectives . Review the functional anatomy of lumbo-sacral spine List essential components of a LBP history, including RED FLAGS Describe common causes of LBP Review proper indications for imaging and referral

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Lower Back Pain

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  1. Lower Back Pain MS3 Sports Medicine Workshop

  2. Objectives • Review the functional anatomy of lumbo-sacral spine • List essential components of a LBP history, including RED FLAGS • Describe common causes of LBP • Review proper indications for imaging and referral • Review Physical Examination of LS spine • Correlate pathology with pertinent physical findings

  3. “Red Flags” in back pain • Age < 15 or > 50 • Fever, chills, UTI • Significant trauma • Unrelenting night pain; pain at rest • Progressive sensory deficit • Neurologic deficits • Saddle-area anesthesia • Urinary and/or fecal incontinence • Major motor weakness • Unexplained weight loss • Hx or suspicion of Cancer • Hx of Osteoporosis • Hx of IV drug use, steroid use, immunosuppression • Failure to improve after 6 weeks conservative tx

  4. Epidemiology of back pain • Fifth most common reason for all physician visits in US • Second only to common cold as cause of lost work time • 25% of US adults have LBP x1d in last 3 mos • The most common cause of disability in persons under the age of 45

  5. Your patient with LBP has paresthesias in the lateral foot, decreased toe-raise strength, diminished sensation lateral foot, and diminished Achilles reflex. This is suggestive of dysfunction of which nerve root? • L4 • L5 • S1 • S2

  6. Better anatomy knowledge=Better diagnoses and treatments

  7. Vertebra • Body, anteriorly • Functions to support weight • Vertebral arch, posteriorly • Formed by two pedicles and two laminae • Functions to protect neural structures

  8. Ligaments • Anterior longitudinal ligament • Posterior longitudinal ligament • Ligamentum flavum • Interspinous ligament • Supraspinous ligament

  9. Ligamentous Anterior longitudinal ligament

  10. Muscles • Spinalis • Longissimus • Iliocostalis • Quadratus lumborum • Ilium to lumbar TPs • Intertransversalis • Interspinals • Multifidus • Erector spinae

  11. Sciatica is defined as… • Pain radiating up the back • Pain radiating to the thigh • Pain radiating below the knee • Pain in the butt

  12. Neuro-anatomy

  13. L4 • L5 • S1

  14. PATIENT HISTORY “OPQRSTU” • Onset • Palliative/Provocative factors • Quality • Radiation • Severity/Setting in which it occurs • Timing of pain during day • Understanding - how it affects the patient

  15. Which one is NOT considered a “red flag” of LBP? • History/suspicion of cancer • Age over 50 • Fever or chills • Sciatica

  16. “Red Flags” in back pain • Age < 15 or > 50 • Fever, chills, UTI • Significant trauma • Unrelenting night pain; pain at rest • Progressive sensory deficit • Neurologic deficits • Saddle-area anesthesia • Urinary and/or fecal incontinence • Major motor weakness • Unexplained weight loss • Hx or suspicion of Cancer • Hx of Osteoporosis • Hx of IV drug use, steroid use, immunosuppression • Failure to improve after 6 weeks conservative tx

  17. Onset • Acute - Lift/twist, fall, MVA • Subacute - inactivity, occupational (sitting, driving, flying) • ?Pending litigation • Pain effect on: • work/occupation • sport/activity (during or after) • ADL’s

  18. Other History • Prior h/o back pain • Prior treatments and response • Exercise habits • Occupation/recreational activities • Cough/valsalva exacerbation

  19. Cancer Age > 50 History of Cancer Weight loss Unrelenting night pain Failure to improve Infection IVDU Steroid use Fever Unrelenting night pain Failure to improve Fracture Age >50 Trauma Steroid use Osteoporosis Cauda Equina Syndrome Saddle anesthesia Bowel/bladder dysfunction Loss of sphincter control Major motor weakness Diagnoses & Red Flags

  20. Physical ExaminationMsk Big-6 • Inspection • Palpation • Range of motion • Strength testing • Neurologic examination • Special tests

  21. Approach to LBP • History & physical exam • Classify into 1 of 4: • BAD: LBP from other serious causes • Cancer, infection, caudaequina, fracture • LBP from radiculopathy or spinal stenosis • Non-specific LBP • Non-back LBP • Workup or treatment

  22. BAD low back pain (examples)

  23. What to do aboutPossible BAD Low Back Pain • Cauda Equina: • MRI STAT Neurosurgery consult • Fracture: x-rays • MRI/CT if still suspect • Cancer: x-rays + CRP, ESR, CBC (+/- PSA) • MRI if still suspect • Infection: x-rays; CRP, ESR, CBC, +/- UA

  24. Radiculopathy, Spinal Stenosis • Sciatica (pain below knee) • May have abnl neuro exam • Radiates to leg • Pain worse walking, better sitting (pseudo-claudication)

  25. What to do aboutSuspected Radiculopathy or Spinal Stenosis • Refer to Physical Therapy • Follow in 2-4 weeks for progress • If no improvement by 6-12 weeks • Plain films, MRI, +/- EMG/NCV • Refer for interventions • Epidural steroid injections for radiculopathy

  26. Spondylosis (Osteoarthritis of facet/disk) Spondylolysis/-listhesis Kyphosis/scoliosis Acute lumbar strain Facet pain Discogenic pain Ligamentous pain Causes of “Non-specific LBP”

  27. Management of an acute low back muscle strain should consist of all the following EXCEPT: • X-rays to rule out a fracture • Educate the patient on generally good prognosis • Non-opiate analgesics • Remain active

  28. What to do aboutNon-specific Low Back Pain • Educate patient about expected good prognosis • Advise to remain active as tolerated • Provide analgesics and self-care directions • FU in 2-4 weeks; adjust tx as needed • Don’t do x-rays unless it becomes chronic • WU if no improvement

  29. Renal dz (pyelo, stones, abscess) Pelvic dz (PID, endometriosis, prostate) Gastrointestinal dz (cholecystitis, ulcer, cancer) Retroperitoneal dz Aortic aneurysm Zoster Diabetic radiculopathy Rheumatologic disorders Reiters Ankylosing Spondylitis Inflammatory bowel dz Psoriatic spondylitis Neoplasia (multiple myeloma, metastatic CA, lymphoma, leukemia, spinal cord tumors, vertebral tumors) “Think Outside the Back”

  30. What to do aboutNon-back LBP • WU and tx as appropriate for suspected diagnoses

  31. Diagnostic Studies Radiographs Early if RED FLAGS Symptoms present > 6 weeks despite tx

  32. Diagnostic Studies MRI indications Possible cancer, infection, cauda equina synd >6-12 weeks of pain Pre-surgery or invasive therapy Disadvantages False-positives; may not be causing pain More costly, increased time to scan, problem with claustrophobic patients

  33. Diagnostic Studies Bone Scan indications Adolescent LBP (r/o spondy) SPECT scan Cost ~$300

  34. Diagnostic Studies EMG/NCV r/o peripheral neuropathy localize nerve injury correlate with radiographic changes order after 6-12 weeks of symptoms Pre-surgical or invasive therapy

  35. Lab Studies Indications Chronic LBP Suspected systemic disease CBC, CRP, ESR, +/- UA, SPEP, UPEP Avoid RF, ANA or others unless indicated

  36. Issues specific to CHRONIC LBP(>6 weeks and/or non-responsive) • Evaluation • X-rays, labs • Evaluate for “YELLOW FLAGS” • Management • Medication selection • Interventions

  37. YELLOW FLAGS in Chronic LBP • Affect: anxiety, depression; feeling useless; irritability • Behavior: adverse coping, impaired sleep, treatment passivity, activity withdrawal • Social: h/o abuse, lack of support, older age • Work: believe pain will be worse at work; pending litigation; workers comp problems; poor job satisfaction; unsupportive work env’t

  38. Medications in Chronic LBP • FIRST: Acetaminophen • Second: NSAIDs • If one fails, change classes • Meloxicam  naproxen  COX2’s • Third: tramadol • Fourth: tri-cyclic antidepressants • Radiculopathy: gabapentin • LOATHE: narcotics

  39. Non-pharmacologic treatments EFFECTIVE NOT EFFECTIVE/ CONFLICTING EVIDENCE BACK SCHOOLS LOW-LEVEL LASER LUMBAR SUPPORTS PROLOTHERAPY SHORT WAVE DIATHERMY TRACTION ULTRASOUND • Acupuncture • Exercise therapy • Behavior therapy • Massage • TENS • Spinal manipulation • Multidisciplinary rehab program

  40. Epidural Steroid Injections • Indicated for radiculopathy not responding to conservative mgmt • Conflicting evidence • Small improvement up to 3 months • Less effective in spinal stenosis

  41. Surgery for Chronic LBP • Most do NOT benefit from surgery • Should have ANATOMIC LESION C/W PAIN DISTRIBUTION • Significant functional disability, unrelenting pain • Several months despite conservative tx • Procedures: spinal fusion, spinal decompression, nerve root decompression, disc arthroplasty, intradiscal electrothermal therapy

  42. Break for Physical Examination Hands-on Session

  43. Inspection • Observe for areas of erythema • Infection • Long-term use of heating element • Unusual skin markings • Café-au-lait spots • Neurofibromatosis • Hairy patches, lipomata • Tethered cord • Dimples, nevi (spina bifida)

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