Case 69 - Low Back Pain Flashcards
Ddx of LBP
1) Red Flags?
* intraabdominal or lower thoraciac pathologies –> pancreatic cancer, pneumonia, cauda equina syn, aortic aneurysm
2) radiculopathy or no radiculopathy
- compression of nerve root
- herniated disk
- spinal osteophytes
- intradural or epidural tumor
3) others
- myofacial pain
- musculoskeletal pain
- facet joint arthropathy
How do you evaluate a patient with LBP?
1) H&P
- location, severity, radiation of pain
- LE weakness, numbness, shooting pain, bladder or bowel dysfunction
- social history - job/work/activity
- focused neuro exam
- bending, side-bending, flexion, extension of back
2) imaging
* MRI or CT of lumbosacaral area –> r/o maligancy or epidural abscess
what is classic presentation of a patent with a herniated nucleus pulposus?
- inciting event such as lifting heavy object
- herniation of disc –> mechanical compression of roots or chemical inflammation from substance released form degenerating intervertebral discs (histamine, bradkinin)
- pain worse with bending, coughing, sneezing.
- pain improves with rest/lying down
PE
- positive straight leg (radicular pain 2/2 foot dorsiflexion with leg extended)
Neuro
- sensory deficit dermatomal distribution
- reflex testing - L4 = patellar, S1 = achilles
- motor - L5 = weakness of dorsiflexion of foot
what is the diference between spinal stenosis vs herniated disk?
1) spinal stenosis
- narrowing of central spinal canal
- 2/2 enlarging posterior facet joint, osteophytes, ligamentum flavum hypertrophy, bulging disk anulus
- Pain relieved with flexion
- pain and neuro deficits over several dermatomes
- chronic and mild discomfort progressing with time
2) herniated nucleus pulposus
- pain relieved by reclining (worse with flexion)
- pain and neuro deficit over a specific dermatome
- acute and severe onset
what is the mechanism of action of epidural steroid injection?
- radicular pain is caused by nerve inflammation from chemical irritation or direct impingement of nerve
- steroid injection into epidural space –> antiinflammatory effect on nerve rot
- transforaminal vs caudal vs interlaminar
- always use Fluroscopic guidance
complication
- intravascular injection
- transforaminal –> radicular artery injection of particulate steroid = anterior spinal artery syndrome = paralysis (motor area)
What oral meds are prescribed for LBP?
- oral analgesics and PT = best medical tx
Oral analgesics
1) NSAID
- antiinflammatory and analgesic
- prostaglandin sensitize nociceptors to painfulstimuli
- NSAID inhibit cyclooxygenase –> inhibit prostaglandin synthesis –> analgesia and antiinflam
- SE: bleeding, gastric ulcer, renal dysfuction, PLT dysfunction
- COX-2 = decrease risk of gastric ulceration and bleeding
2) anticonvulsant agents
- Neurontin
- unknown mechanism of action
- SE: weight gain, sedation, dizziness
3) TCA
- amitrtryptline / nortriptyline
- decrease reuptake of serotonin and NE –> neurotransmitters in decending inhibitory spinal cord pain nerve pathway
4) muscle relaxant
* cyclobenzaprine