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Acute Low Back Pain. Richard W. Kendall, DO. Assistant Professor Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation. Outline. Introduction / Epidemiology. Most Important lecture!! Anatomy / Pain generators Diagnosis Treatment. Course Objectives. Know the RED FLAGS in history taking.
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Acute Low Back Pain Richard W. Kendall, DO. Assistant Professor Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation
Outline • Introduction / Epidemiology. • Most Important lecture!! • Anatomy / Pain generators • Diagnosis • Treatment
Course Objectives • Know the RED FLAGS in history taking. • Know the Pain Generators of the Lumbar spine • Know the Guidelines for Imaging of the spine with acute low back pain. • Know the general guidelines to rehabilitation.
Epidemiology of Back Pain • Who gets it? • 60-90% lifetime prevalence. • 80-90% have recurrent episode. • What is the Natural history? • 80-90% resolves in 1 month. • 20-30% remains “chronic” • 5-10% “disabling”
Anatomy • 5 lumbar vertebra • Transitional segments • Components • Body • Pedicles • Facets • Lamina • Spinous and transverse processes
Vertebral Body • End- plate attachment • Tall (L1).. Wide (L5) • L3 Square
Posterior Elements • Spinous Process • Lamina • Pedicle • Transverse process
Lumbar Intervertebral Disc • Annulus Fibrosis • Dense connective tissue, interwoven matrix • Outer 1/3 innervated from sinuvertebral nerve and gray rami communicans. • Concentric layers attaching to end plates • Nucleus pulposus • 80-90% water, mucuopolysaccharide, collagen.
Zygopophyseal Joints • Joint Capsule • Meniscoid • 10% wt bearing • Sagital plane L1 45° orientation L5.
Lumbar ligaments • ALL • PLL • Ligamentum flavum • Facet capsules • Interspinous ligaments • Supraspinous ligaments
Muscle Layers • Deep • Multifidus, Quadratus lumborum • Iliocostalis, longissimus, (Erector s.) • Superficial • Thoracolumbar fascia • Lattisimus dorsi
Nerves and Vessels • Neural Foramen • Spinal Nerve • Dorsal Root ganglion • Relationships
Pain Generators • Annulus Fibrosis (outer 1/3 only?) • Periosteum • Neural Membranes (Anterior Dura) • Ligaments/ Z-joint capsules • Muscles.
Diagnostic • Pain- location (radiation), qualitative, what makes pain better / worse. • Neurologic Symptoms • Paresthesias. • Bladder /Bowel retention or incontinence. • Weakness.
Diagnostic • History: • RED FLAGS • Trauma, • Age >50, • Hx of CA, • Unexplained wt loss, • fever or immunnosupression, • IV Drug use, • Neurologic deficit.
Examination • Range of Motion (document range and pain) • Flexion- 40° • Extension- 15° • Lateral bending- 30° • Rotation- 45°
Neurologic Examination I • Strength tests • L1, L2- Hip flexion (Psoas, rectus femoris) • L2,3,4 – Knee extension (Quads) • L2,3,4 -- Hip adductors (adductors and gracilis) • L5 – ankle/ toe dorsiflexion (ant. Tibialis, EHL) • L5– Hip abductors (gluteus medius, TFL) • S1- ankle plantarflexion (gastroc/ soleus) • S1– Hip extensors (Gluteus max., Hamstrings)
Neurological examination II • Reflexes • L2,3,4- Quads • L5- Medial hamstring • S1- Achilles • Sensation • Pin prick- primarily spinothalamic tract • Vibration/ position sense- dorsal columns • Vibration tested with 256cps fork! • Position on 3-4th digit
Provocative Maneuvers • Straight Leg Raise (supine or seated) • For L5-S2 radicular symptoms • Femoral Stretch • For L2-4 radicular symptoms • FABER’s test • For SI joint, hip joint, lumbar z-joint symptoms
Provocative ManuversSeated SLR (Slump Test) Standing Femoral Stretch
Imaging or Not? • Low yield without RED FLAGS present. • “Abnormal” findings in Asymptomatic. • Jarvik- LAIDback study. • Psychological. • Anxiety, fear-avoidance- possibly help? • Depression- “there must be something wrong”
Guidelines for Imaging • NO RED FLAGS! • Acute pain- symptomatic treatment for 4 weeks, re-evaluate. Image if pain continues. • AHCPR Guidelines for Acute LBP. • Sub acute pain- Pain for >4wks. Failed symptomatic treatment. Image. • Chronic pain- none, unless changes in sx’s • Chronic intermittent- TX as acute patients
Medications • NSAID’s- anti-inflammatory, mild pain relief. • Tylenol- mild- moderate pain relief. • Narcotics- moderate to severe pain. (fail above). • Anticonvulsants- neurogenic pain. • TCA’s- neurogenic symptoms, paresthesias. • Muscle relaxants- acute spasm.
General Therapy Guidelines • Pain Control (symptomatic TX.). • Tissue injury (physiologic TX.) • Motion in Pain-free range. • Restore Full pain free range of motion. • Core CONTROL for Neutral spine. • Restore Muscle ENDURANCE. • Restore Functional movements.
Therapies • Bed Rest. • Less than 2 days. • ROM. • Lower extremity, multifidus, lats. • Core strengthening. • Transversus Ab., quadratus, multifidus, glutes. • Multiplanar exercises.
Modalities • Thermal (hot/cold) • Ultrasound • Electrical Stimulation (NMES) • TENS (transcutaneous electrical neurostim.) • Bracing
Injections • Epidural procedures • Helpful in radicular pain and stenosis • Z-joint Blocks • Short-term relief for furthering therapy. • Medial branch blocks • radiofrequency lesions.
Who needs Surgery? • Unstable Spine Acute fractures with Neurologic deficit. • Severe Stenosis • After failure of aggressive non-operative tx. • Tumor? • Progressive Neurologic deficit