8. clinical conditions of the lumbar spine Flashcards
What is mechanical back pain characterised by?
- pain when the spine is loaded,
- that worsens with exercise
- relieved by rest
- It tends to be intermittent
- often triggered by innocuous activity
What are the risk factors for mechanical back pain?
Obesity, poor posture, a sedentary lifestyle with deconditioning of the paraspinal (core) muscles, poorly-designed seating and incorrect manual handling (bending and lifting) techniques.
What is the epidemiology of mechanical back pain in the UK?
- 50% of the UK population report lumbar back pain for at least 24 hours in any one year; half of those episodes last > 4 weeks.
- 80% of the UK population will experience lumbar back pain lasting >24 hours in their lifetime.
What is marginal osteophytosis?
Development of osteophytes (bony spurs) called syndesmophytes adjacent to the end plates of the discs.
Why does marginal osteophytosis occur?
dehydration of nucleus pulposus of the intervertebral discs with age leads to:
- decrease in the height of the discs
- bulging of the discs
- alteration of the load stresses on the joints
What occurs due to increase stress on the facet joints?
Develop osteoarthritic changes.
Facet joints are innervated by the meningeal branch of the spinal nerve, so arthritis in these joints is perceived as painful.
What can development of arthritis in verterbral bodies and facet joints and reduced disc height lead to?
Reduction in the size of the intervertebral foramen, leading to compression of the spinal nerves and is perceived as radicular or nerve pain.
How does a herniated disc cause pain?
Pain occurs due to herniated disc material pressing on a spinal nerve
Which age group do herniated discs occur most commonly in and how long do they take to resolve?
- most common age group is 30-50 years
- 90% of cases resolve by 3 months
What are the 4 stages of disc herniation?
- Disc degeneration: chemical changes associated with ageing cause discs to dehydrate and bulge
- Prolapse: Protrusion of the nucleus pulposus occurs with slight impingement into the spinal canal. The nucleus pulposus is contained within a rim of annulus fibrosus
- Extrusion: The nucleus pulposus breaks through the annulus fibrosus but is still contained within the disc space
- Sequestration: The nucleus pulposus separates from the main body of the disc and enters the spinal canal.
What are the most common sites for a slipped disc?
The L4/5 and L5/S1 discs due to the mechanical loading at these joints.
At what sites are nerve roots most vulnerable in a disc slippage?
1) Where they cross the intervertebral disc (paracentrally);
2) Where they exit the spinal canal in the neural foramen (laterally).
What are the different types of disc herniation?
- Paracentral prolapse (96% of cases)
- far lateral (2%)
- central (2%)
Describe paracentral prolapse
The nucleus pulposus most commonly herniates posterolaterally (lateral to the posterior longitudinal ligament), causing compression of a spinal nerve
root within the intervertebral foramen
What is the exiting nerve root and which type of disc herniation puts it at the most risk?
Spinal nerve exiting at the level of the disc herniation
- far lateral herniation
What is the tranversing nerve root and which type of disc herniation puts it at the most risk?
Nerve root that emerges at the level below the herniated disc
- paracentral herniation
What does Central herniation carry a risk of?
cauda equina syndrome
In a paracentral herniation of the L4/5 disc, which root is most frequently compressed?
the L5 root (the traversing root) is most frequently compressed because the L4 root (the exiting root) emerges above the level of the L4/5 disc
In a paracentral herniation of the L5/S1 disc, which root is most frequently compressed?
the S1 root, not the L5 root.
What is sciatica?
Pain caused by irritation or compression of one or
more of the nerve roots that contribute to the sciatic nerve.