Neck and back (2Q) Flashcards

1
Q

Ankylosing spondylitis: patient

A

M>F; usually early adulthood (but can occur in 16-juvinile form)

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2
Q

Ankylosing spondylitis: Sx

A

Insidious onset, begins as pain in buttocks, heels, and lower back. Typically worse in morning, improves with activity, worse in evening.

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3
Q

Ankylosing spondylitis: Px

A

Enthesitis, loss of lordosis, reduced spinal ROM. Uveitis (30%); chest tightness (30%)

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4
Q

Ankylosing spondylitis: Imaging

A

Sacroiliac joints show symmetric, bilateral widening followed by subchondrial erosions and ankylosis. Vertebra are ‘squared’ losing anterior concavity and syndesmophytes form especially in vertebral margins. Usually begins in lumbar spine.

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5
Q

Ankylosing spondylitis: labs (diagnosis and progress)

A

RF negative; HLA B27 positive (88-96%); Creatinine phosphokinase (CPK) is a good indicator of disease severity.

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6
Q

Ankylosing spondylitis: treatment

A

Early: Indomethacin and exercises. About 10% of patients require surgery (remove v-shape, refuse in fixed position) due to fixed bony flexion of spine, loss of horizontal gaze, or ambulatory problems.

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7
Q

Cervical spondylosis: patient

A

Men>50; Women>60, esp w/ hx of degenerative disc disease.

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8
Q

Cervical spondylosis: pathogenesis

A

Disc degeneration–> loss of water and proteoglycans–> degeneration of longitudinal ligaments w/ bony spur formation–> disc space narrowing–> buckling of ligmentum flavum–> narrowing of spinal canal–> cord/artery impingement

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9
Q

cervical spondylosis: Sx

A

occipital headache, worse in morning improving throughout day, painful or stiff neck. May be accompanied by radiculopathy, usually this is paresthesias of arm, and rarely pain (parasthesias distal, pain proximal).

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10
Q

cervical spondylosis: Px

A

Decreased ROM in neck, radiculopathy with sensory and motor deficits may occur (Sensory before motor). Cervical spondylotic myelopathy (severe complication) has signs of upper motor neuron lesion.

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11
Q

cervical spondylosis: imaging

A

plain film or MRI signs of narrowing of spinal canal (less than 10-13 mm between C3 and C7) measured between an osteophyte on inferior aspect of vertebral body and the base of the spinous process of the vertebra below.

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12
Q

cervical spondylosis: Tx

A

Initial management: soft collar (until sx subside), anti-inflammatorys, PT w/ mild traction (except in cord compression, RA, or osteoarthritis). Analgesics and muscle relaxants are also helpful.

Epidural corticosteroids help with radiculopathy, and trigger point injections help with pain.

Surgery (disc decompression) if the patient does not respond to a conservative treatment protocol or shows evidence of deteriorating myelopathy or radiculopathy.

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13
Q

disc herniation: patient

A

patient is typically over 40 and may have occupational history of strain or be obese.

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14
Q

disc herniation sx:

A

Classically present with low back pain that acutely changes to radiating leg pain (which eclipses the back pain). Pt. may also have numbness or weakness in pattern of compressed nerve root.

Sx are worse with flexion and sitting, and improved with extension (standing, lying down) and may be exacerbated by full extension at knee.

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15
Q

disc herniation: Px

A

Check L1-S1 dermatomes for light touch and pinprick (may have assymmetry).
Gait abnormalities/difficulty bearing weight on ipsilateral leg.

Straight leg raise (SLR): pt supine, elevate leg 20-70 degrees and reproduce radiating pain (in same or contralateral leg). Prone SLR eliciting anterior thigh pain with extension of leg suggests L2-L4 level herniation.

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16
Q

disc herniation: imaging

A

MRI showing protrusion (bulge of posterior disk), extrusion (mushroom-like), or sequestration (complication of extrusion in which nerniated nucleus pulpus is no longer in continuity w/ disc of origin).

Protrusion= most common, MUST correlate to clinical findings, worst surgical prognosis
Extrusion=  more diagnositic, better prognosis.
17
Q

disc herniation: Tx

A

Conservative: PT/exercise, activity modification, NSAIDs, narcotics, muscle relaxers, steroids (sx resolve 60-90%)
Surgery: decompression of nerve root by removal of offending disc fragment.

18
Q

Indications for surgery in disc herniation:

A
  1. persistent sx despite nonoperative tx
  2. profound or progressive motor deficit
  3. cauda equina syndrome
  4. intractable pain
  5. patient preference
19
Q

spinal stenosis: patient

A

Pt. may have Hx of disc degeneration, herniation, or osteophytes. Pt w/ congenitally narrow spinal canal will present in adolescence. Most pts >50.

20
Q

spinal stenosis: Sx

A

insidious onset radiating buttock and leg pain that is exacerbated by extension (standing, walking downhill) and improved by flexion (sitting, fetal position). Opposite of disc herniation. There can be associated numbness, weakness, or easy fatigue of legs. Radiculopathy may be present even at rest.

21
Q

spinal stenosis: Px

A

No conclusive signs, r/o osteoarthritis, other causes

22
Q

spinal stenosis: imaging

A

non-contrast MRI to find narrowing.

23
Q

spinal stenosis: tx

A

symptomatic (same as disc herniation). Surgical for persistent or non-remitting pain- decompressive laminectomy of stenotic areas.

24
Q

degenerative disk disease: patient

A

more common in older, obese patients

25
Q

degenerative disk disease: Sx

A

insidious onset low-back pain exacerbated by flexion and improved with extension (like herniated disk). Pain may radiate to buttocks, thigh, or groin (but rarely below knee w/o nerve involvement).
Pain that does not improve with rest has a poor surgical prognosis.

26
Q

degenerative disc disease: Px

A

Nothing specific, just back pain that is worse with flexion and not accompanied by neurologic sx.

27
Q

degenerative disc disease: imaging

A

Xray (upright!): disk space narrowing, vertebral body osteophytes.

MRI T2 is diagnostic for showing disc degeneration.

Note: the vast majority of people with radiologic findings of degenerative disks do NOT have symptoms and therefore do not have DDD!

28
Q

DDD: Tx

A

no excellent treatments: same as for spinal stenosis and disk herniation (symptomatic). DDD that is refractory to 6 mo of nonoperative therapy may benefit from surgery.

Surgery= spinal fusion and stabilization. Note that 1/3 of DDD patients are refractory to ALL treatment.

29
Q

spondylolisthesis: definition

A

abnormal slippage of one vertebra over the next.

30
Q

degenerative spondylolisthesis: patient

A

typically pts are >50

31
Q

spondylolisthesis: Sx

A

low back or leg pain with radicular symptoms like spinal stenosis (can actually cause spinal stenosis). L4/5 is most common. Isthmic type may have “clunking” sensation on flexion and extension.

32
Q

isthmic spondylolisthesis: patient

A

10-30s. L5/S1 is most common.

33
Q

spondylolisthesis: imaging

A

easily visualized on xray, especially standing lateral. Lateral listhesis can also occur and requires AP or MRI/CT to visualize.

34
Q

spondylolisthesis: tx

A

Adults w/ isthmic or degenerative slips rarely progress. Not operative Tx is same as for all back pain. Surgery is recommended for pts who choose it or are refractory to medical Tx.

Children and iatrogenic slips often WILL progress and should undergo surgical fusion.