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Common Disorders of the Spine LeAnne Mansberger, MSPAS, PA-C Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center Department of Orthopedics [Abbreviated for 870 – 2016] Mechanical neck pain • Local pain in neck that is usually muscular in nature • Usually paraspinals, upper trapezius, complaint of tension headaches • Variety of causes: MVA, excessive physical activity, etc. • Diagnosis: based on history, will not see much on physical exam other than muscle spasm • Imaging: no needed at first however if symptoms persist or there is a traumatic event x-rays should be obtained. MRI may ordered if symptoms persist long term but usually normal Mechanical neck pain • Treatment: rest, ice/heat, HEP, physical therapy, chirotherapy, soft collar • Know Hoffman’s test: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xfguBiqsoDk • Know Spurling’s test: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h8GxF73P6GQ Low back sprain/strain/mechanical back pain • Same mechanism of injury as neck strain • Patient will make statements like “my back locked up” • They are often in pain and very inpatient • Chief complaint is back pain following an incident, the key is that there are no leg symptoms AFP Approach to Back Pain: • Common complaint; usually benign • Quickly rule out red flags: • • • • • • • Trauma (from MVA or fall) Major or progressive motor or sensory deficit New onset bladder or bowel incontinence Loss of anal sphincter tone Saddle anesthesia History of CA metastatic to bone Spinal infection AFP Approach to Back Pain: • Acute low back pain: 6-12 weeks of pain between the costal angles and gluteal folds • May or may not radiate down legs (sciatica) • Back pain is usually non-specific, but need to consider infection, tumor, osteoporosis, fracture, inflammatory arthritis Back Pain Differential: Intrinsic spine Compression fracture Herniated nucleus pulposus Lumbar strain/sprain Spinal stenosis Spondylolisthesis Spondylolysis Spondylosis (degenerative disk or facet joint arthropathy) History of trauma (unless osteoporotic), point tenderness at spine level, pain worsens with flexion, and while pulling up from a supine to sitting position and from a sitting to standing position Leg pain is greater than back pain and worsens when sitting; pain from L1-L3 nerve roots radiates to hip and/or anterior thigh, pain from L4-S1 nerve roots radiates to below the knee Diffuse back pain with or without buttock pain, pain worsens with movement and improves with rest Leg pain is greater than back pain; pain worsens with standing and walking, and improves with rest or when the spine is flexed; pain may be unilateral (foraminal stenosis) or bilateral (central or bilateral foraminal stenosis) Leg pain is greater than back pain; pain worsens with standing and walking, and improves with rest or when the spine is flexed; pain may be unilateral or bilateral Can cause back pain in adolescents, although it is unclear whether it causes back pain in adults; pain worsens with spine extension and activity Similar to lumbar strain; disk pain often worsens with flexion activity or sitting, facet pain often worsens with extension activity, standing, or walking Back Pain Differential: Systemic Connective tissue disease Multiple joint arthralgias, fever, weight loss, fatigue, spinous process tenderness, other joint tenderness Inflammatory spondyloarthropathy Intermittent pain at night, morning pain and stiffness, inability to reverse from lumbar lordosis to lumbar flexion Malignancy Pain worsens in prone position, spinous process tenderness, recent weight loss, fatigue Vertebral diskitis/ osteomyelitis Constant pain, spinous process tenderness, often no fever, normal complete blood count, elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate and/ or C-reactive protein level Referred Abdominal aortic aneurysm Abdominal discomfort, pulsatile abdominal mass Gastrointestinal conditions: pancreatitis, peptic ulcer disease, cholecystitis Abdominal discomfort, nausea\vomiting, symptoms often associated with eating Herpes zoster Unilateral dermatomal pain, often allodynia, vesicular rash Pelvic conditions: endometriosis, pelvic inflammatory disease, prostatitis Discomfort in lower abdomen, pelvis, or hip Retroperitoneal conditions: renal colic, pyelonephritis Costovertebral angle pain, abnormal urinalysis results, possible fever Back Pain Red Flags: POSSIBLE ETIOLOGY HISTORY FINDINGS Cancer Strong: Cancer metastatic to bone Intermediate: Unexplained weight loss Weak: Cancer, pain increased or unrelieved by rest Cauda equina syndrome Strong: Bladder or bowel incontinence, urinary retention, progressive motor or sensory loss Fracture Infection PHYSICAL EXAMINATION FINDINGS Weak: Vertebral tenderness, limited spine range of motion Intermediate: Prolonged use of steroids Strong: Major motor weakness or sensory deficit, loss of anal sphincter tone, saddle anesthesia Weak: Limited spine range of motion Weak: Vertebral tenderness, limited spine range of motion Weak: Age older than 70 years, history of osteoporosis Strong: Severe pain and lumbar spine surgery within the past year Strong: Fever, urinary tract infection, wound in spine region Strong: Significant trauma related to age* Intermediate: Intravenous drug use, Weak: Vertebral tenderness, immunosuppression, severe pain and distant limited spine range of motion lumbar spine surgery Weak: Pain increased or unrelieved by rest Back Pain Neurologic Findings: DISK HERNIATION AFFECTED NERVE ROOT MOTOR DEFICIT SENSORY DEFICIT L3 Hip flexion L4 Knee extension L5 S1 REFLEX CENTRAL PARACENTR AL Anterior/medi al thigh Patella Above L2-L3 L2-L3 L3-L4 Anterior leg/medial foot Patella Above L3-L4 L3-L4 L4-L5 Dorsiflexion\gr Lateral Medial eat toe leg/dorsal foot hamstring Above L4-L5 L4-L5 L5-S1 Plantar flexion Posterior Achilles leg/lateral foot tendon Above L5-S1 L5-S1 None LATERAL Low back sprain/strain/mechanical back pain - EXAM Back Pain Specialist Exam • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FDTulyaRvRw Clonus – indicates motor neuron lesions • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UX75k8s5QUE Exercises for Sciatica – PT • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=htgyPKNHUls Low back sprain • Physical exam: normal • Imaging: no imaging necessary early on, may do imaging if pain persists and always start with x-ray • Treatment: rest, ice/heat, physical therapy, muscle relaxers, pain management for trigger point injections if spasms are a recurrent issue AFP: Approach to nonspecific acute low back pain First visit - Patient education Reassure the patient that the prognosis is often good, with most cases resolving with little intervention Advise the patient to stay active, avoiding bed rest as much as possible, and to return to normal activities as soon as possible Advise the patient to avoid twisting and bending - Initiate trial of a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug or acetaminophen - Consider a muscle relaxant based on pain severity - Consider a short course of opioid therapy if pain is severe (ie, 3 days) - Consider referral for physical therapy (McKenzie method and/or spine stabilization) if it is not the first episode Second visit (2-4 weeks later) - Consider changing to a different nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug - Consider referral for physical therapy (McKenzie method and/or spine stabilization) if not done at initial visit - Consider referral to a spine subspecialist if pain is severe or limits function AFP: Recommended Treatments for Acute Low Back Pain • NSAIDS – (low quality evidence) try one, if not helpful, try a different one • Muscle Relaxants – (moderate quality evidence) cyclobenzaprine, tizanidine, metaxalone. May help for 2-4 weeks. Cause drowsiness. • Opioids – (little evidence of benefit) 3 studies showed no difference in pain relief or return to work time between opioids and NSAIDS/Tylenol. • Epidural injections – not helpful for acute pain; may help radicular pain that does not respond to 2-6 weeks conservative Tx • Patient education! Give reassurance. Teach back exercises. AFP: Acceptable Treatments for Acute Low Back Pain • Physical Therapy: The McKenzie method https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wBOp-ugJbTQ • PT Directed Home Exercises (moderate benefit). These reduce recurrence, increase time between episodes, and decrease health care needs/costs. • Application of ice/heat: (low quality evidence) – may be helpful in first five days • Epidural injections – not helpful for acute pain; may help radicular pain that does not respond to 2-6 weeks conservative Tx • Patient education! Give reassurance. Teach back exercises. AFP: Unsupported Treatments for Acute Low Back Pain • Oral Steroids – questionable benefit for acute radicular leg pain. No studies to support use for acute back pain without radiculopathy. • Acupuncture – (low quality) no benefit over NSAIDS • Exercise – (aerobic condition ) – no more effective than other treatments • Lumbar support – unclear if any benefit • Massage – insufficient evidence • Chiropractic technics: low quality evidence that it may be more effective than sham treatments, but no more effice in reducing disabillity. Little evidence that it is cost effective for low back pain. • Traction: no evidence of benefit Bed Rest: BAD IDEA for Acute Low Back Pain • Less effective in improving pain/function at 3-12 weeks than advice to stay active • Prolonged bedrest causes joint stiffness, muscle wasting, loss of bone mineral density, pressure ulcers, and DVT Radiculopathy • Radiculopathy • • • • Nerve pain in a dermatomal pattern “pinched nerve” Can be cervical or lumbar in origin Usually the result of a herniated disc but can be osteophyte/tumor/hypertrophied ligamentum Radiculopathy • Disc herniation: the annulus tears and the nucleus pulposus extrudes out into either the central canal or neural foramen Nerve Root Motor Function - Cervical Radiculopathy • Cervical radiculopathy • Pain, numbness, tingling, pins/needles in upper extremities • Important to differentiate between radicular vs. peripheral • Will typically be unilateral • PE: test all UE major muscle groups, reflexes in both UE and LE, sensation, Hoffman’s, clonus, Spurlings • Diagnosis: made by history, PE, and imaging • Imaging: x-ray, MRI, EMG Cervical radiculopathy Cervical radiculopathy • Treatment: physical therapy, NSAIDs, gabapentin, steroids, epidural steroid injections, cervical decompression and fusion (ACDF) Radiculopathy • Lumbar radiculopathy • Pain, numbness, tingling, pins/needles in lower extremities. • “sciatica” • Will complain of increase in pain in LE with straining • Usually unilateral however can be bilateral • PE: check all major muscle groups of lower extremities, neuro exam, straight leg raise, gait assessment • Diagnosis: made by PE, history, imaging Nerve Root Motor Function- Lumbar Radiculopathy • Treatment: NSAIDs, physical therapy, oral steroids, gabapentin, epidural steroid injections via pain management, lumbar discectomy, lumbar laminectomy Radiculopathy • Lumbar discectomy • Done through small incision depending on patient size • Only remove the herniated portion, we do not remove all of the disc • Slight increased chance of re-herniation immediately post-op Spondylosis • The natural aging process of the spine; disc degeneration and facet arthropathy • Most commonly seen at C5-C6 because that is where the most flexion and extension occur in the subaxial spine. • Can ultimately lead to both central and foraminal stenosis due to osteophyte formation. Spondylosis • Patient can present with various complaints; anything from axial neck pain to radiculopathy to myelopathy • PE: same as radiculopathy exam • Imaging: x-rays, MRI if radicular complaints • Treatment: NSAIDs, physical therapy, pain management (facet injections), surgical decompression Spinal Stenosis • Narrowing of the spinal canal, cervical or lumbar • Caused by a combination of boney structures and soft tissues decreasing the diameter of the central canal. • 3 types of stenosis: central, lateral recess, and foraminal • Central will present with bilateral extremity symptoms • Lateral recess will affect the lower nerve root • Foraminal will affect the upper nerve root Spinal Stenosis • Symptoms: low back pain with bilateral lower extremity pain worsened with activity • Important to differentiate between neurogenic and vascular claudication • Neurogenic: pain with walking and standing, relieved with sitting • Vascular: pain with walking, relief with standing still or sitting; weakened pulses Spinal Stenosis • Physical exam: May notice sensory deficit, walking in a hunched over way “shopping cart sign”, may or may not be weak . • In vascular claudication: pulses weak, hairless legs • Imaging: x-rays, MRI • Treatment: NSAIDs, physical therapy, injections, surgical decompression via laminectomy • Video! http://www.webmd.com/painmanagement/video/laminectomy Post laminectomy Pre laminectomy Spondylolisthesis • Forward subluxation of vertebral body causing stenosis • Grading scale 1-5 • Degenerative vs. Isthmic • Degenerative: spondylolisthesis without a pars defect • Isthmic: spondylolisthesis with a pars defect Spondylolisthesis • Degenerative • Usually seen at L4/L5 • 8x more common in women • Caused by degenerative cascade: first the disc degenerates, which allows the facets to degenerate, which leads to instability. Spondylolisthesis • Isthmic • Usually seen at L5/S1 • Rarely progress beyond Grade II • Increased incidence of spondylolysis in athletes who see a lot of hyperextension (football lineman, gymnast, weightlifters) Spondylolisthesis • Symptoms: low back pain most common complaint, neurogenic claudication, pain that changes with position • Physical Exam • Imaging: x-rays (AP/lateral/flex/ext),CT scan, MRI • Treatment: NSAIDs, physical therapy, injections not all that helpful, surgical decompression and fusion Ankylosing Spondylitis • Autoimmune spondyloarthropathy • Thought to be a genetic component • 4:1 male to female ratio, usually onsets in 3rd decade of life • Spine becomes very stiff which leads to a susceptibility to cervicothoracic fractures • Patient will complain of pain and stiffness that is worse in the morning. Ankylosing Spondylitis • Labs with show a positive HLA-B27 and negative rheumatoid factor • X-rays will show scalloping of vertebral bodies, “bamboo spine”, progressive kyphotic deformity • Diagnostic criteria: sacroilitis, +/- uveitis, positive HLA-B27 • Physical exam: limited chest wall expansion, Schober test (shows decreased Lspine ROM) Ankylosing Spondylitis • Treatment: NSAIDs, physical therapy, Cox 2 inhibitors (Celebrex), TNF alpha blockers (inflixamib- remicade; etanercept- Enbrel), usually not responsive to steroids Scoliosis • Deformity of the spine in either the coronal or sagittal plane • Curves <30 degrees rarely progress however curves >50 degrees commonly progress • Cobb angle: measured on x-ray Scoliosis • Most people are diagnosed as young person however degenerative scoliosis is also common • Patient will present with low back pain most commonly. Can have radicular pain. • Physical exam: will see thoracic prominence with forward bending • Treatment: physical therapy, follow yearly with serial x-rays if concerned for progression, NSAIDs, bracing, surgical correction Compression Fractures • Traumatic vs. Pathologic • Traumatic: falls, MVCs • Pathologic: osteoporosis, metastatic cancer • Patient will present with acute onset localized pain • If no known event then consider osteoporosis or mets to the spine. Be concerned if fracture occurs above T5. Compression Fracture • Physical Exam: tender to palpate directly over spine, some paraspinal tenderness, local pain with movement • Imaging: x-rays, CT scan, DEXA scan Compression fractures • Treatment: pain medication, bracing?, physical therapy after bone healed, kyphoplasty/vertebroplasty • Kyphoplasty • A cavity is created within the vertebral body by inflating a balloon and then cement is injected • Vertebroplasty • Not recommended by AAOS anymore due to increased risk of cement extravasation from increased pressure occurring due to not making a cavity first Cauda Equina Syndrome • Cauda equina is the “horse tail” or the bundle of nerves that comes off of the spinal cord. • It consists of nerves L1-S5 • Usually the result of a massive disc herniation however can be from boney fragment, tumor, or hematoma Cauda Equina Syndrome • Patient will present complaining of bilateral lower extremity pain, bowel/bladder dysfunction, saddle anesthesia, motor deficit, sensory deficit • Physical exam: sensorimotor deficits, decreased or absent LE reflexes, reduced or completely absent sensation to pin prick in the perianal region or perineum, decreased rectal tone, absent bulbocavernous reflex Cauda Equina Syndrome • Imaging: STAT MRI!! • Send patient to ED because they need an URGENT surgical decompression!! Cervical myelopathy • Compression of the spinal cord at the cervical level • Can be rapid or slow in progression • Rapid progression needs to be treated urgently with surgical decompression • Patient will present with complaints of bilateral UE paresthesias, weakness, gait disturbance, loss of fine motor skills Cervical Myelopathy • Physical exam: weakness in UE and/or LE, sensory deficits, hyperreflexia, positive Hoffman’s sign, clonus, poor balance • Imaging: MRI: stat if rapid progression • MRI will show central stenosis as well as signal changes within the spinal cord itself Cervical myelopathy • Treatment: if slow progression can watch and wait however should warn patient of increased risk of catastrophic event • If rapid progression then decompression with possible fusion is needed. Take home points! • Cauda Equina syndrome is a surgical emergency! • If your patient complains of saddles anesthesia or bowel/bladder dysfunction send them to the ED. • If you see the word HLA-B27 think ankylosing spondylitis. • Know the difference between neurogenic and vascular claudication. Take home points! • “shopping cart sign” • Know your dermatomes and nerve root motor functions. • If patient involved in MVC always get cervical x-rays and check an odontoid view. Odontoid fractures are hard to see on plain films without that view. • Compression fracture without known event is concerning for metastatic CA Take home points! • Know what a positive Hoffman’s means as well as clonus Thank you! Any questions?