Back Pain Flashcards
Briefly explain the burden of baack pain
- Very common disease which has the highest economic burden of any disease.
- For the patient is causes financial burden, insomnia and psychological effects
What is the definition of chronic back pain and some differential diagnosis?
CBP - pain for 3+ months.
- Most chronic back pain is mechanical (97%), referred or systemic (infection, malignancy or inflammatory) A lot of isolated back pain goes unexplained
Describe the clinical presentation and causes of non-specific low back pain (mechanical back pain)
- Onset at any age. Pain generally worse with movement or prolonged standing, gets better with rest. Often EMS for less than 30mins.
- Causes include:
- lumbar strain/sprain (most common. Muscle spasm usually settling in 24-48 hours),
- Degenerative discs (spondylosis. Pain worse with flexion, sitting or sneezing)
- Degenerative facet joint disease (localised and worse with extension)
- Disc prolapse/spinal stenosis
- Compression fractures.
What is the management of non-specific lower back pain?
- Keep diagnosis under review and give reassurance!
- Promote self management with pain killers (non-opioids) and stay active!
- Exercise programmes and physio.
- Do not give injections, traction or lumbar support.
Describe the clinical features of disc prolapse (herniated nucleus pulposus)
- Often presents with acute pain which is worse when coughing.
- If disc prolapses to the side then is can cause unilateral sciatica.
- There is a positive straight leg raising test and reduced reflexes.
- Most resolve spontaneously within 12 weeks but if not then investigate further. Very few need surgery.
What are the symptoms of cauda equina syndrome?
Spinal cord ends at L1/2. Compression occurs commonly at L4/5
- Bilateral sciatica (unilateral indicates lateral disc hernia),
- Saddle anaesthesia,
- Bladder or bowel dysfunction with reduced anal tone,
- Change in erection/vagina sensation,
- Weakness
Describe features of spinal stenosis
- Anatomical narrowing of the spinal canal which can be congenital and/or degeneration.
- Often presents with bilateral claudication in the legs/calves which is worse when walking or resting in a flexed position.
- Investigations include X- ray and MRI
What is Spondylolisthesis?
- A slip of one vertebrae over the other which can occur due to a pars interarticularis defect. Pain may radiate to the posterior thigh and become worse with extension
Describe features, diagnosis and treatment of a compression fracture
- Often occur in elderly patients who have risk factors such as steroid use or smoking or osteoporosis.
- Presents with severe sudden onset of pain which radiates in a belt around the chest/abdomen. Should settle within 3 months but can result in kyphosis.
- Diagnosis is via X-ray and DEXA scan
- Treatment is either conservative with analgesia, calcitonoin or vertebroplasty (cement) or kyphoplasty (billon)
What are the possible causes of refferred back pain?
This can occur from retroperitoneal structures such as:
- Aortic aneurysms (Pulsating abdo mass which if ruptures can be fatal)
- Acute pancreatitis (epigastric pain which is better when leaning forward)
- Peptic ulcer disease (epigastric pain with meals, vomiting, melaena)
- Acute pyelonephritis or renal colic ( history of UTIs or stones)
- Endometriosis.
Describe features, investigations and treatment for infective discitis
- Typically occurs in immunosupressed, diabetes or IVDU patients. It can present with fever, weight-loss, night pain and pain at rest (constant).
- Investigations include bloods (FBC, ESR, CRP, blood cultures), X ray or MRI (no disc space will be seen), radiological guided aspiration.
- Most commonly caused by staph aureus and needs treatment with IV antibiotics +/- surgical debridement.
What are the common tumours which metastases to the spine and how does it present
LP Thomas Knows Best - Lung, Prostate, Thyroid, Kidney, Breast.
It can present with constant pain which is worse at night and systemic symptoms. Investigate via X-ray, MRI and bone scan
What are the red flag symptoms for back pain?
- New onset of age <16 or >50.
- Pain following significant trauma,
- Previous malignancy,
- Systemic symptoms,
- Previous steroid use,
- IVDU/immunosupression,
- Urinary retention,
- Night pain,
- Thoracic spine pain.
What are the red flag signs for back pain?
- Saddle anaesthesia,
- Reduced anal tone,
- Hip or knee weakness,
- Neuro defect,
- Progressive spinal deformity