Back Pain And Spinal Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

What are the negative effects of back pain?

A
  • financial (eg. Missing work)
  • insomnia
  • psychological (eg. Emotional stress for patient and partner, limitations in fulfilling family tasks etc.)
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2
Q

What defines chronic back pain and the differentials of it?

A
  • 3+ months
  • most are ‘wear and tear’/non-specific
  • differentials: medical/surgical emergencies, life-threatening cancers, treatable conditions
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3
Q

What are the possible causes of back pain?

A
  • mechanical: non-specific low back pain (NSLBP)
  • referred (not from a pathology of the back)
  • systemic: infection, malignancy, inflammatory
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4
Q

Describe the features of ‘mechanical’ back pain

A
  • onset at any age, rate varies
  • worsens with movement/prolonged standing and improves with rest
  • early morning stiffness <30mins
  • causes: lumbar strain/sprain, degenerative discs/facet joints, disc prolapse, spinal stenosis, compression fractures
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5
Q

Describe how the symptoms of mechanical back pain differ with cause

A
  • lumbar strain/sprain (most common): muscle spasms settle within 24-48hrs
  • degenerative disc disease (‘spondylosis’): asymptomatic for many, pain increases with flexion, sitting and sneezing - increasing pressure or squeezing disc
  • degenerative facet joint disease: pain more localised and increases with extension
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6
Q

What features would you see on imaging for degenerative spinal disease?

A
  • decreased joint space
  • worn down disc
  • osteophytes around disc space
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7
Q

How would you manage non-specific LBP?

A
  • review diagnosis
  • reassurance
  • education, promote self-management (stay active)
  • exercise programme and physio
  • analgesics (avoid opiates)
  • acupuncture
    NO injections, traction, lumbar supports
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8
Q

Describe the pain pathophysiology of a prolapsed disc

A
  • when a disc prolapses the softer middle part of the disc bulges through the fibrous outer ring and presses on the nerve as it leaves the spinal cord
  • compression of posterior nerve results in a widespread pain
  • compression laterally results in dermatomal pain
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9
Q

Describe the features of disc prolapse

A
  • can be acute
  • pain worsened on cough
  • associated with leg pain (dermatome), sciatica, radiculopathy
  • straight leg raising test positive
  • reduced reflexes
  • most resolve within 12 weeks
  • minority need investigations and surgery (helps sciatica not back pain)
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10
Q

Describe features of cauda equina syndrome

A
  • occurs at L1/2
  • neuropathic symptoms: bilateral sciatica, saddle anaesthesia
  • bladder and bowel dysfunction with reduced anal tone (ask about urinary retention/incontinence)
  • usually caused by a large prolapsed disc
  • requires an urgent neurosurgical review
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11
Q

Describe the features of spinal stenosis

A
  • anatomical narrowing of spinal canal (congenital/degenerative)
  • presents with claudication in legs/calves that is worse when walking
  • investigations = x-ray/MRI if uncertain about diagnosis/management
  • surgery high risk
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12
Q

Describe the features of spondylolisthesis

A
  • slip of one vertebra on the one below
  • due to pars interarticularis defect (asymptomatic at most)
  • pain can radiate to posterior thigh and increase with extension
  • rarely needs surgery
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13
Q

Describe the features of compression fracture

A
  • typically elderly patient, osteoporosis
  • sudden onset, severe
  • pain radiates in ‘belt’ around area affected
  • most pain settles in 3 months, chronic mechanical and kyphosis (more anterior compression than posterior)
  • x-ray and DEXA scan required
  • treatment: conservative (analgesia), calcitonin, vertebroplasty (cement), kyphoblasty (balloon)
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14
Q

What can you see on imaging of a vertebral compression fracture?

A
  • disc space is maintained
  • bone collapses around the disc
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15
Q

What conditions can cause referred pain in the back?

A
  • aortic aneurysm (CVS features (increased BP and HR), collapse, pulsating abdo mass)
  • acute pancreatitis (epigastric pain, relief leaning forwards)
  • peptic ulcer disease (epigastric pain, worse after meals, vomit, blood/malaena)
  • acute pylonephritis/renal colic (UTI/stones history, radiation, haematuria)
  • endometriosis/gynae pathology
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16
Q

What are the clinical signs of infective discitis?

A
  • high index of suspicion needed
  • fever
  • weight loss
  • constant back pain (worse at night)
  • immunosuppressed, diabetes, IV drug use history
17
Q

What investigations and management is needed for infective discitis?

A
  • bloods: FBC, ESR, CRP, blood cultures (most common = S.aureus)
  • imaging: x-ray (look for vertebral destruction), MRI
  • radiology-guided aspiration
  • management: IV antibiotics +/- surgical debridement
  • look for source
18
Q

What can imaging show for infective discitis?

A
  • no disc space between vertebrae
  • disc and bone irregularity
  • healing leads to callus bone formation and limited functionality after
19
Q

What are the features of back pain related to malignancy?

A
  • history of malignancy: lung, prostate, thyroid, kidney, breast (LP Thomas knows best)
  • > 50 years
  • constant pain, worse at night
  • systemic symptoms, primary tumour signs and symptoms
  • X-ray, MRI, bone scan
  • look for primary tumour
20
Q

Describe the features of inflammatory back pain?

A
  • younger onset <45y
  • early morning stiffness >30mins
  • may wake up during the night with buttock pain
  • may have family history
21
Q

What are the red flag symptoms with back pain?

A
  • new onset <16 or >50y
  • following significant trauma
  • previous malignancy
  • systemic (fevers/rigors, malaise, weight loss)
  • previous steroid use
  • IV drug abuse, HIV or immunocompromised
  • recent significant infection
  • urinary retention
  • non-mechanical pain (worse at rest)
  • thoracic spine pain
22
Q

What are the red flag signs with back pain?

A
  • saddle anaesthesia
  • reduced anal tone
  • hip or knee weakness
  • generalised neurological deficit
  • progressive spinal deformity