Causes and Sources of Chronic Low Back Pain

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Revision as of 19:20, 17 June 2020 by Jeremy (talk | contribs) (from Julie's presentation based off chapter 14 of low back pain Bogduk book)
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Introduction

Based off Julie's presentation.

Causes of acute back pain largely unknown Opposite data to chronic back pain applies History and Examination insufficient for diagnosis Plain x-rays do not provide diagnosis in most cases MRI may reveal certain conditions With appropriate tests, a diagnosis in 50-70% of chronic lower back pain can be performed

It is often cited that cause cannot be determined in 80% - historic figure dating back to 1987 Quebec Task Force โ€“ Imaging/invest techniques have improved.

Red Flags

Red flag conditions, such as tumours and infections are uncommon, if not rare causes P% = prevalence of a serious condition in patients with acute back pain Z% = of these patients above, develops chronic back pain Prevalence of serious condition in patients that develop chronic lower back pain = (P/Z)% Eg tumours: P=1%, If 30% of acute patients become chronic, prev in chronic = (1/30)% = 3%

Structural Abnormalities

Tempting, but incorrect, to attribute chronic low back pain to structural abnormalities Congenital Transitional vertebrae, non-dysjunction (congenital fusion) and spina bifida occulta occur equally commonly in asymptomatic and symptomatic individuals Spondylolisthesis Large scale epidemiological studies shown in adults โ€“ not associated with pain

Spondylolysis Pars defect occur in 7% of asymptomatic population, more common in sports people Equally as common in asymptomatic and symptomatic Definitive test โ€“ anaesthetize the defect โ€œstress fractureโ€ in pars interarticularis. relief of pain with LA implies defect is source, predicts surgical success


Spondylosis/Disc degen/facet degen/OA Do not constitute legitimate diagnoses of cause or source of pain

Instability

Controversial term, various definitions Clinicians have classified instability according to nature of lesions on imaging 1 โ€“ Fractures and fracture dislocations 2 โ€“ Infections of ant elements 3 โ€“ Neoplasms 4 โ€“ Spondylolisthesis 5 โ€“ Degenerative Does not require demonstration of instability in biomechanical sense

Spondylolisthesis

Spondylolithesis rarely progresses in adults Radiographic studies show that Grade 1 and 2 are associated with reduced range of motion rather than instability Further precision studies have shown that motion patterns of patients are indisguishable from degenerative disc disease

Degeneration of the Lumbar Spine

Several types of instability have been attributed to degen of lumbar spine These include: Rotational โ€“ hypothetic entity, certain radiographic signs suggested, reliability/validity not est Retrolisthetic โ€“ during extension (but this movement can occur in asymptm) Translational โ€“ abnormal forward translation during flexion. Difficulty in defining upper limit of normal (3-4mm in different studies) Despite all efforts to define โ€“ no studies have shown that it is related to cause of pain, nor rectifying it abolishes symptoms

Degenerative changes are an expression of metabolic stress, not a disease No known mechanism whereby degenerative changes can be painful Lots of different triggers, however final common pathway Degenerative joint disease is a disturbing label that patients associate with a poor prognosis Genetic factors predispose to degenerative changes, but age is the strongest correlate In contrast, features of internal disc disruption correlate strongly with back pain

Seminal Journal Articles

Degenerative Joint Disease of the Spine โ€“ N. Bogduk. Radiol Clin N Am 50 (2012) 613โ€“628 High-Grade Lumbar Spondylolisthesis โ€“ A. Beck et al. Clin N Am 30 (2019) 291-298 Isthmic Lumbar Lumbar Spondylolisthesis โ€“ A. Bhalla. Clin N Am 30 (2019) 283-290 Degenerative Lumbar Spondylolisthesis โ€“ M. Bydon. Clin N Am 30 (2019) 299-304 Surgical vs Non Surgical Treatment of Lumbar Spondylolisthesis. Clin N Am 30 (2019) 333-340 Lumbar instability: an evolving and challenging concept. J. Beazell. Journal of Manual and Manpulative Therapy. Vol 18 1 (2010)

Biology

Chondrocytes maintain balance between synthesis and degradation Synthesis promoted by growth factors Degradation achieved by action of MMP, whose synthesis is activated by TNF๐›ผ Osteophytes โ€“ adaptive modelling, attempt to increase surface area to reduce load May be normal joint, with excessive load, or joint which capacity to bear loads is compromised by degradation of matrix.

Regional Differences - Discs

Cervical Differ from lumbar discs in their anatomic structure and their expression of degenerative change Cervical discs lack a concentric anulus fibrosus, only well developed anteriorly Nucleus pulposus persists until 2nd decade, changes to firm, dry fibrocartilage plate Changes are essential for allowing axial rotation

Lumbar Degen changes are more chemical in nature, expressed as changes in PG/hydration. Seen on MRI with change in signal intensity

ZA Joints

Cervical: Face upwards and backwards, therefore equally share compressive load with discs Injuries most likely to occur from weight bearing Degenerative changes occur at all levels, most commonly C3/4

Lumbar: Face posteriorly and laterally, share little of the axial load Resists axial rotation and anterior translation Degen changes arise earlier, more common in L4/5

Causes of degenerative disc disease

Specific metabolic causes are rare Limited to diabetes mellitus and ochronosis Impaired nutrition promoted, evidence lacking Vascular disease, smoking weak correlate Low grade infection explored โ€“ not conclusive Strongest relationship โ€“ AGE

Aging Changes

  • Chondrocytes might be subject to innate senescence
  • They may have genetic abnormalities that affect matrix quality
  • Or normal cells may become impaired with accum toxins/mechanical stresses
  • Z joints have not been explicitly studied
    • Under umbrella of synovial joints โ€“ combination of genetic factors/abnormal biomechanics
  • Lumbar disc degeneration โ€“ evidence more explicit (twin studies)
  • Heavy loads account for some variance
    • Larger proportions explained by genetic factors

Correlations

  • One method is to compare prevalence in people with and without pain. If prev is higher in people with pain, association is established
  • Another method is to anesthetize joint. If relieves pain, target joint is implicated as source.

The prevalence of lumbar disc degeneration in asymptomatic individuals, clearly increases with age Radiographic features of cervical spine in asymptomatic people again increases with age (hardly any โ€œnormalโ€ looking spines in over 50)

Neck Pain

Study compared patients with neck pain, with controls No differences in prevalence of spondylosis, severe disc changes or facet joint changes between cases and controls Degen changes in cervical discs/z joints do not correlate with pain

Low Back Pain

A large population study looked at osteoarthosis in the context of pain No association with pain, irrespective of grade Many studies on disc degeneration Systematic reviews on high quality studies showed no clinical association between degenerative disc changes and pain

Spondylolisthesis

  • Spondylolithesis โ€“ translation of 1 vertebral body on another. 6 broad categories โ€“ (wiltse classification) isthmic, traumatic, degen, pathologic, dysplastic and post surgical. It can also be classified according to severity (Merding)
  • Bogduk โ€“ not associated with pain, finding it on xray does not constitute diagnosis. Rarely progresses. Grade 1 โ€“ 2 associate with reduced ROM rather than instability.

Degenerative Lumbar Spondylolisthesis

Incidence 19-43%, mean age 71, most common in females Most common L4/5 Initial event โ€“ disc degeneration/narrowing of disc space - micro-instability Cause of pain multi factorial Most are grade 1 (75%) โ€“ less than 25% slip Average slip progression โ€“ 18%, no correlation between progression and symptoms Natural history and management of low grade slip is controversial, conservative management generally indicated. Surgery for refractory cases

Isthmic Lumbar Spondylolisthesis

Isthmic meaning movement of one vertebrae on another, due to a defect in the pars, termed spondylolysis (unhealed stress fracture). Spondylolysis can be present without displacement. Spondylolistesis occurs in 40-60% of patients with bilateral spondylolysis (unlikely if unilateral). Most are asymptomatic, 25% have back/radicular pain Prevalence in children 2.6%, increasing to 4% in adult Asymptomatic in 3-11% of adults More common in men, L5/S1 Causes are multifactorial, genetic component Back pain may be from micro-stability or pain from degenerative disc Symptomatic patients are initially treated non-operatively

High grade lumbar sponylolisthesis

Defined as >50% slippage Most are at L5/S1, a result of isthmic spondylolisthesis Most have a degree of neurologic compromise Pain usually with hyperextension, resolves with time due to fracture union Treatment is focused on correction of lordosis and sagittal balance Natural history โ€“ difficult to predict if further slippage will occur Conservative management trialed in adolescence, usually unable to provide permanent relief๏ฟฝ

Surgical vs Non Surgical Treatment of Lumbar Spondylolithesis โ€“ Karsy et al.

Non operative effective in patients without neurogenic claudication or radiculopathy and stable spondylolisthesis (grade 1) 1/3 show progression over time Lumbar decompression alone can be effective for low grade, fusion if higher grade Mechanical instability is change of 3mm-6mm between flexion/ext films, or change from sitting to standing Meta analysis โ€“ surgical intervention is more effective than non operative, for patients with pain and functional limitations

Lumbar instability โ€“ J. Beazell

Historical term, that has been debated through 1980-90โ€™s Encompasses two types: Mechanical (radiographic) Functional (clinical) Topic is subject to much debate on exact nature of problem, correlation with history and relevance to patient management