Lumbar Spine: history and Interview Flashcards

1
Q

What neuromusculoskeletal structures can cause LBP

A
  • Muscles or fascia strains
  • nerves
  • ligaments and joint capsules
  • bones
  • disc
  • emotional overlay?
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2
Q

What visceral structures can refer symptoms to the lumbar region

A
  • lower GI tract
  • uterus
  • kidneys
  • aortic aneursym
  • pancreas
  • prostate
  • testicular dysfunction
  • myocarditis
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3
Q

What are some of the first questions you will want to know during the history and interview and why

A
  • patient’s age: may be more suceptible to certain conditions
  • patients occupation: what stresses are they undergoing
  • gender: some conditions may impact them differenly or be more common in a specific gender
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4
Q

Types of Pain

A
  • Nociceptive
  • nociplastic
  • neuropathic
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5
Q

Nociceptive pain

A
  • due to activation of nociceptors due to acute tissue injury
  • inflammation, mechanical irritant
  • Pain localized to the area of injury +/- somatic referral
  • clear proportionate mechanical or anatomical nature to aggravating and easing factors
  • usually intermittent and sharp with movement or mechanical provocation, may be more constant dull ache or throb at rest
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6
Q

Nocicplastic pain

A
  • due to disturbances in central pain processes
  • perception of pain is heighted and prolonged
  • increased excitability
  • decreased inhibition
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7
Q

Nociplastic pain signs

A
  • disproportionate, non-mechanical, unpredictable, pattern of pain provocation
  • pain disproportionate to the nature and extent of injury or pathology
  • diffuse/non-anatomic areas of pain and tenderness on palpation
  • strong association with maladaptive psychological factors
  • try to prevent rather than treat
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8
Q

Neuropathic pain

A
  • due to lesion or disease of somatosensory system
  • radiculopathy, neuropathy etc
  • pain referred in dermatomal or cutaneous nerve distribution
  • history of nerve injury, pathology, or mechanical compromise
  • pain/symptoms provocation with mechanical testing which move, load or compress neural tissue
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9
Q

What questions to ask during history and interview in reguards to pain

A
  • how long have you had the pain
  • location of pain
  • pain quality
  • what makes it better worse or the same
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10
Q

Centralization vs periperalization

neuropathic pain

A
  • Centralization of pain is the progressive retreat from the most distal extend of referred or radicular pain toward midline
  • peripheralization is pain moving toward peripheral
  • centralization = getting better
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11
Q

What other questions to ask with Back/spine pain

A
  • increase symptoms with cough/sneeze: this increases pressure around the dura of the spine
  • postures which decrease or increase pain: whats being stressed
  • worse in the morning or evening: things like OA
  • what movements cause your pain
  • paresthesia/anesthesia
  • weakness or reduced strength
  • usually activities/pastimes
  • aggravting activities
  • activities that ease pain
  • sleeping position
  • difficulty with urination
  • imaging: can think something on image is causing pain when its not
  • general health
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12
Q

Red flags with Back pain

A
  • insidious and progressing
  • H/O cancer
  • back and abdominal pain
  • LBP with saddle numbness and incontience
  • pain does not vary with activity
  • constant unrelived with posiiton
  • unable to be still
  • increase
  • > 45
  • LBP with nausea, vomiting fever
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13
Q

Lumbar classification

A
  • subgrouping patients with LBP evolution of a classification approach to physical therapy
  • manipulation
  • stabilization
  • specific exercise
  • traction
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14
Q

Manipulation

requirements

A
  • no symptoms distal to knee
  • recent onset <16 days
  • Low FABQ score
  • hypomobility of the lumbar spine
  • Hip IR ROM >35º
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15
Q

Patient signs that they would need

Stabilization

A
  • young age <40
  • greater general flexibility
  • instablity catch/aberrant
  • +prone instability test
  • post partum
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16
Q

Specific exercise

A
  • symptoms distal to buttocks
  • symptoms centralize with extnesion
  • symptoms peripherlize with flexion
  • directional preference for extension

OR

  • older age >50
  • direction preference for flexion
  • imaging evidence of stenosis

OR

  • visible fronal plane deviation
  • directional preference for lateral translation
17
Q

Traction

A
  • no signs and symptoms of nerve compression
  • no movements centralize symptoms