Lower Back Pain
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Transcript Lower Back Pain
Lower Back Pain
Dr Angela Jenkins
ST3 Anaesthetics
10th September 2008
Introduction
Epidemiology
Presentation
Investigations
Management
Conclusions
Epidemiology
Incidence
- Lifetime prevalence 60-85%
- Peak incidence age 40-60y
- No difference between male and female
- More common in heavy, manual occupations
- Increased incidence in smokers
Epidemiology
Impact on Society
Approx 52 million working days lost per annum
500 000 people receive Incapacity Benefit
£481 million pa cost to NHS
£5 billion pa cost to society
50% chance of returning to work after 6 months absence
Impact on NHS
Transition from Acute to
Chronic Pain
Risk factors:
Signs of nerve root involvement
Ongoing compensation claim
Long time off work
Psychological distress +/- depression
Poor physical fitness
Heavy smoking
Presentation
Simple musculoskeletal pain (95%)
Spinal nerve root pain (4-5%)
Serious spinal pathology (~1%)
Musculoskeletal Back Pain
Mechanical in nature
Age 20 – 55 years
Pain in lumbosacral area and buttocks
Referred into upper thighs
Dull ache, varies with activity
Otherwise physically well
Musculoskeletal - Causes
Discogenic pain
Sacroiliac Joint pain
Facet Joint pain
Ligament and Muscle pain
Nerve Root Pain
Well localised, sharp, electric shock-like
Dermatomal radiation down leg into foot
Neuropathic element worse than back pain
May have paraesthesia +/- loss of reflexes
Exacerbated by coughing, straining, sneezing
Nerve root pain with SLR test
Nerve Root - Causes
Posterior Disc Herniation
Spinal Stenosis
Epidural Adhesions
Serious Spinal Pathology
Differential Diagnosis
Spinal tumours / myeloma
Infection
Trauma
Inflammatory disease
Cauda Equina Syndrome
AAA
Retroperitoneal fibrosis
Serious Spinal Pathology
‘Red flag markers’
Age <20y or >55y
Constant / progressive pain
Acute onset in the elderly
H/O tumour
Fever / night sweats
Immunosuppression / HIV
Recent bacterial infection
Acute neurological symptoms
Unexplained weight loss
Systemically unwell
Serious Spinal Pathology
Examination
Tenderness on SI springing
Multiple nerve root signs
Dissociative signs
Symmetrical limitation of SLR
Signs of lower limb ischaemia
Abdominal mass
Investigations
Radiology
X-ray, CT, MRI, isotope bone scan
Blood tests
FBC, ESR, Ca, plasma viscosity
Nerve conduction studies
Diagnostic nerve blocks
Management
Aims:
Improve pain
Optimise physical, psychological and social functions
Management
Pharmaclogy
NSAIDs
Anti-depressants
Anti-convulsants
Opioids
Anti-spasmodics
Psychology
CBT
Pain management programmes
Management
Physiotherapy
TENS
Accupuncture
Injections
Radiofrequency Lesioning
Spinal Cord Stimulation
Surgery
Conclusions
Consequences may be more problematic than the pain
itself
Huge cost to society and NHS
Multiple presentations / causes
Must exclude serious pathology
Multi-disciplinary management
?