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1. Low Back PainJamous M, MD, Ph.D., FAANSDepartment of Neurosciences, JUST
2. Anatomy/ Spine
3. Anatomy Vertebra – body, neural arch, bony process
Ligaments & muscles
4. Epidemiology 50-60% Life time incidence of LBP
15-30% prevalence among adults
1% of population are disabled because of LBP
15% of the sick leave
85% no specific diagnosis can be made
Highest prevalence 40-60 year of age
Overall incidence of LBP 45/1000 person per year
M=F
5. Clinical presentation LBP +/- radiculopathy
Pain exacerbated with physical stress and relieved with bed rest
P/E differentiate mechanical (non-specific) LBP from serious spinal conditions (radiculopathy or cauda equina syndrome caused by PID, tumors, infections…..)
6. History / red flags Hx of cancer (prostate, breast, kidney, thyroid, lung)
Unexplained wt loss
Immunosuppression
Pain that worse at rest
psuedoclaudication
Pain not responding to conservative Rx
Skin or other systemic infection
Urine and fecal incontinence
7. Examination / red flags Fever
Spinal deformity
Tenderness & L.O.M
+ve SLR test
Motor and /or sensory deficits
8. Recommendationsabsent red flags Bed rest
Activity modification
Analgesia
Reassurance
> 85 % show improvement within 4 weeks without the need for diagnostic studies
9. Diagnostic work / pts with red flags Plain L.S Xray
L.S CT scan
L.S. MRI
L.S. Myelography
10. Lower back pain + red flags PID; Traumatic (Acute) vs degenerative (gradual)
Spinal tumors (intradural vs extradural)
Spinal infections (osteomyelitis, epidural abcess)
11. PID Displacement of disc material beyond confines of the disc space
Pain start with back pain, which after days or weeks produce radicular pain with reduction of the back pain
Precipitating factors are identified < 20% of cases
Radicular pain is relieved by flexing the knee and hip
Pain exacerbated by coughing and sneezing or straining (cough effect)
Bladder symptoms (usually retention) < 5%
12. PID
13. PID Physical signs (NL-sensory & motor loss)
Lesègue sign (slow leg raising test)
14. PID
15. Disc Herniation L4-5, L5-S1 most common
Cervical and thoracic do occur
Thoracic: abrupt neuro deficits
Narrow canal
Postero-lateral aspect of the disc
16. Disc Herniation X-ray only good if inter-vertebral disc is narrow
MRI is gold standard
Electromyelography localizes the specific nerve root
17. Disc Herniation
18. PID
Most common at L4-L5 & L5-S1
Bulge, protrusion, extrusion, sequestered, migrated
Midline or lateral
19. PID
20. PID
21. DDD Aging process
Progressive dehydration of the nucleus pulposus and loss of disk volume
Degenerative tear in the annulus with herniation of the nucleus pulposus through this tear.
Present with L.B.P and L.O.M
22. DDD Three Phases:
phase I, circumferential tears or fissures in the outer annulus. +/- endplate separation or failure, interrupting blood supply to the disk and impairing nutritional supply and waste removal. Such changes may be the result of repetitive microtrauma.
Circumferential tears may coalesce to form radial tears.
24. DDD Phase II;
The unstable phase, loss of mechanical integrity of the trijoint complex. Internal disk disruption (IDD), loss of disk-space height. Concurrent changes in the facet joints include cartilage. leading to segmental instability (Spondylolisthesis).
25. DDD Phase III;
Stabilization phase, characterized by further disk resorption, disk-space narrowing, endplate destruction, disk fibrosis, and osteophyte formation
26. DDD
27. Disc Herniation Initial therapy is to decrease pressure on the root
Bed rest up to 4 weeks
Non-steroid anti-inflammatory
Muscle relaxants
28. Disc Herniation Absolute indication for surgery
Significant muscle weakness
Progressive neurological deficit with bed rest
Bowel or bladder dysfunction
29. Disc Herniation Relative indication for surgery
Pain despite bed rest
Recurrent episodes of severe pain
30. PID / Discectomy
31. PID / Discectomy
34. Discectomy / Complications Infection (superficial vs deep)
Increased deficit (injury to neural structure)
Dural tear (CSF leak)
Complications of positioning
Failed surgery (incorrect dx, incomplete surgery)
Vascular injury
35. Discectomy When pain wont wane, it is usually in the brain
When pain remains, there is secondary gain
36. Thecal sac compression Malignant epidural spinal cord compression (MESCC)
Spinal epidural abscess (SEA)
Spinal epidural hematoma (SEH)
37. Thecal sac compression Factors Force of compression
Direction of compression
Rate of compression
38. MESCC Hematogenous spread
Bone marrow
Compress cord and vascular supply
Edema, infarction
39. MESCC Prostate
Lung
Breast
Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma
Multiple myeloma
Renal cell cancer
40. MESCC Initial presentation in 20% of malignancies
Cervical, thoracic & lumbar by proportion of vertebral body volume
Thoracic is most common
41. MESCC 95% have back pain
Precedes other symptoms by 1-2 months
Percussion tendencies, thoracic location, worse lying down
42. MESCC 75% have weakness by time of diagnosis
Weakness symmetric
Ascending numbness
Autonomic dysfunction, urinary retention
43. MESCC Plain X-ray 10-17% false negative
30-50% of bone must be destroyed for X-ray to be positive
MRI, CT myelography are standards
44. MESCC Plain X-ray 10-17% false negative
30-50% of bone must be destroyed for X-ray to be positive
MRI, CT myelography are standards
45. MESCC
46. MESCC Corticosteroids first line for edema
Dexamethosone, 20-100 mg load, 4-24 mg 4 times/day
Radiation therapy within 24 hours
47. MESCC Surgery for:
unresponsive to radiation therapy
Acute neurological deteriorations
Chemotherapy – Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma
48. The Case 55 yo male with low back pain. Right-sided, worse with movement and non-radiating. He has no weakness, numbness or incontinence. No hx of trauma.
Pmhx: HTN, irritable bowel syndrome
Meds: none
Sochx: alcohol use
PE: afebrile, VSS
Back: mild tenderness right paraspinal area, L2-3
Neuro: normal
What do you want to do?
49. The Case He is given NSAI which makes him better and is sent home. 5 days later he is at a new hospital with the complaint of back pain, says it is the same as before, “I ran out of my medicine”.
PE: Afebrile, VSS
Back: right paraspinal tenderness, worse with movement
Neuro: numbness anterior and med thigh
What do you want to do?
50. The Case He has an abdominal CT scan to R/O renal stone which was normal. He is given a shot of paracetamol which makes him feel better and is discharged with paracetamol and Valium. He returns 2 days later with worsening pain that radiates to the right foot and left knee. He has numbness to the thighs and groin, and has been incontinent of stool.
PE: Afebrile, VSS
Back: diffuse tenderness to lumbar spine palpation
Neuro: RLE- 3/5 strength, numbness anterior and med thigh, decreased reflex. LLE- 4/5 strength.
What do you want to do?
51. The Case
52. The Case MRI is done which confirms a compressive lesion from L2 to L4. WBC = 18,000. The patient is given antibiotics and is admitted to neurosurgery. An L3-L4 laminectomy is done and pus is drained.
Organism= Streptococcus
Patient was discharged to a rehab facility on hospital day 13 for 6 weeks of Vancomycin therapy. At the time of discharge he was continent, but could only ambulate with assisted use of a walker.
53. Conclusion Back pain is common in the ED
Radicular pain requires diligence to find the cause
The severity of spinal cord compression is related to force, duration and rate
Emergent therapy is necessary
“Spinal Cord Attack”
54. SEARisk Factor IVDA
Diabetes
Trauma
Prior spinal surgery or nerve blocks
Immune compromised host
55. SEAPresenting Complaints Back pain
Paresthesias
Motor deficits
Fever
56. SEADiagnosis WBC
Sedimentation Rate
MRI = gold standard
57. SEAOrganisms Staphylococcus aureus
- Methicillin resistant – 15%
Streptococcus
Escherichia coli
Pseudomonas
Klebsiella
Mycobacterium Tuberculosis
58. SEATreatment Surgery – depending on
severity of neuro deficits
Extent of spine involved
Infecting organism
Antibiotics
59. SEANon-Operative Indications Panspinal involvement
Lumbosacral SEA and normal neuro exam
Fixed neuro deficit for > 48 hours
60. SEAAntibiotics Start immediately
Vancomycin
Aminoglycoside or 3rd generation cephalosporin
4 to 6 weeks
61. Vertebral Osteomyelitis
62. VO / Epidural abcess
63. Spinal Epidural Hematoma (SEH)Risk Factors Coagulapathy
Trauma
Vascular lesion
Surgery
Epidural catheterization
64. SEHDiagnosis Back pain, neuro deficit
Symptom onset to max. neuro deficit = 13 hours
All segments of spinal cord
MRI = gold standard
Plain X-ray or CT scan for fractures or dislocation
65. SEHTreatment Surgical evacuation
Immediate surgery within 12 hours of presentation had better outcome than later surgery
66. LBP Spinal stenosis
Ankylosing spondylitis
Spinal tumors
67. First line of therapy for epidural spinal cord compression from metastatic cancer is: A. Radiation therapy
B. Surgery
C. Corticosteroids
D. Chemotherapy
68. The most common site of epidural spinal cord compression from metastatic cancer is: A. Cervical spine
B. Thoracic spine
C. Lumbar spine
D. Sacral spine
69. All of the following are indications for non-operative treatment of spinal epidural abscesses except: A. Pan-spinal involvement
B. Lumbosacral SEA and normal neurological exam
C. Fixed neurological deficits for greater than 48 hrs
D. Urinary incontinence and sensory deficit
70. All of the following contribute to the severity of spinal cord compression except: A. Force of compression
B. Length of spinal cord compressed
C. Duration of compression
D. Rate of compression
71. The most common organism cultured in spinal epidural abscesses is: A. Streptococcus
B. Pseudomonas
C. Staphylococcus aureus
D. Klebsiella
E. Mycobacterium tuberculosis
72. Objectives
Discuss the different types of LBP
Review anatomical principles
Review nontraumatic etiologies for LBP
Treatment options for patients with LBP
73. Nerve Root DiagnosisL4 Pain = lateral back, antero-lateral thigh, anterior calf
Numbness = anterior thigh
Weakness = quadriceps
Diminished knee jerk
Squat and rise
74. Nerve Root DiagnosisL5 Pain = hip, groin, postero-lateral thigh, lateral calf and dorsum of foot
Numbness = lateral calf
Weakness = dorsiflex great toe
Heel walking
75. Nerve Root DiagnosisS1 Pain = mid-gluteal region, posterior thigh, posterior calf to heel & sole
Numbness = posterior calf
Weakness = plantar flex great toe
Diminished ankle jerk
Walk on toes