Symposium 1: Back Pain Flashcards

1
Q

What happens to the spine with age?

A
  • Discs lose water and lose strength and become thinner
  • Vertebral endplates and underlying bone structure loses strength
  • Repetitive loading/trauma can result in annular tears in the discs
  • Dryer, weaker discs result in slacker ligaments
  • Spine is less stable
  • New bone grows (osteophytes) to try to stabilise the spine
  • Increased load over the facet joints
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2
Q

What are the clinical implications of back pain?

A
  • Loss of movement
  • Muscle weakness and wasting
  • Both due to ‘fear avoidance’
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3
Q

What risk factors determine back pain?

A
  • Genetics
  • Environment
  • Body weight
  • Muscle strength
  • Mechanical loading strengthens vertebral bodies and increases the water content within discs
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4
Q

What are the occupational risk factors for LBP?

A
  • Heavy physical jobs
  • Lifting
  • Driving to work
  • Previous episodes of LBP
  • Mental health
  • Posture- laptops, seating, desk set-up
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5
Q

What are the features of simple back pain?

A
  • First episode often sudden onset while lifting/twisting/turning
  • Recurrent episodes with decreasing inter-episode frequency
  • Variable pain related to position/posture
  • Better lying flat
  • May radiate to buttock and leg
  • Often worse at the end of the day and better with lying down/resting
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6
Q

What is the new thinking around LBP management?

A

Exercise, usually no imaging, activity, light duty option

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7
Q

When would you perform imaging?

A

Only if it’s going to change your management plan.

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8
Q

What percentage of people over 65 have changes on x ray?

A

100%

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9
Q

What are the features of sciatica?

A
  • Sciatic nerve – L4 to S3
  • Pain radiating from the back to the leg below the knee
  • May be associated with pins and needles in leg
  • May be associated with numbness and weakness
  • Commonest neurological sign is loss of ankle jerk
  • Commonest weakness is foot drop
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10
Q

What are the red flag symptoms for back pain?

A
  • Age (young or old) at first onset
  • History of carcinoma
  • Weight loss
  • Constant (24h) pain > 1 month
  • No response to treatment
  • Pain worse at rest
  • History of IV drug abuse or HIV positivity
  • UTI or other infection
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11
Q

What are the symptoms of inflammatory back pain?

A
  • Insidious onset
  • Nocturnal pain with marked early morning stiffness
  • Better with exercise (complete opposite of mechanical back pain)
  • Worse with rest
  • Family history
  • Buttock pain
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12
Q

What are the features of ankylosing spondylitis.

A
  • affects young men
  • pain and stiffness in the spine
  • large joint oligoarthritis
  • enthesitis
  • iritis
  • FH of associated diseases (IBD, psoriasis)
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13
Q

What are the risk factors for osteoporosis?

A
  • Age
  • Female (oestrogen)
  • Smoking
  • Steroids
  • Alcohol
  • Family history
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14
Q

What is osteomalacia?

A

Bone softening due to lack of Vit D/calcium.

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15
Q

What is Paget’s disease?

A

Cause by raised alkaline phosphatase - causes and increase in bone density and makes patient more vulnerable to fractures. Can cause spinal stenosis.

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16
Q

What are the features of neurologic claudication (spinal stenosis)?

A
  • Usually a history of chronic back pain
  • Bilateral leg symptoms - weakness, tingling, sometimes described as ‘cold water running down the legs’
  • Leg symptoms come on while standing or walking
  • Relieved by rest (sitting) or leaning forward
  • Distinguish from intermittent claudication by normal peripheral pulses and worse walking downhill