| Literature DB >> 17683556 |
Donald R Murphy1, Eric L Hurwitz.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Spinal pain is a common problem, and disability related to spinal pain has great consequence in terms of human suffering, medical costs and costs to society. The traditional approach to the non-surgical management of patients with spinal pain, as well as to research in spinal pain, has been such that the type of treatment any given patient receives is determined more by what type of practitioner he or she sees, rather than by diagnosis. Furthermore, determination of treatment depends more on the type of practitioner than by the needs of the patient. Much needed is an approach to clinical management and research that allows clinicians to base treatment decisions on a reliable and valid diagnostic strategy leading to treatment choices that result in demonstrable outcomes in terms of pain relief and functional improvement. The challenges of diagnosis in patients with spinal pain, however, are that spinal pain is often multifactorial, the factors involved are wide ranging, and for most of these factors there exist no definitive objective tests. DISCUSSION: The theoretical model of a diagnosis-based clinical decision rule has been developed that may provide clinicians with an approach to non-surgical spine pain patients that allows for specific treatment decisions based on a specific diagnosis. This is not a classification scheme, but a thought process that attempts to identify most important features present in each individual patient. Presented here is a description of the proposed approach, in which reliable and valid assessment procedures are used to arrive at a working diagnosis which considers the disparate factors contributing to spinal pain. Treatment decisions are based on the diagnosis and the outcome of treatment can be measured.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17683556 PMCID: PMC1955449 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-8-75
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Visceral or potentially serious or life threatening diseases that can present as spinal pain.
| Cancer | Previous history of CA, no position of relief, fever, constitutional symptoms, weight loss |
| Benign tumor | Localized severe pain, no position of relief, dramatic relief with NSAID, pain on percussion |
| Infection | History of fever and/or chills, fever on examination, pinpoint tenderness, redness or heat |
| Fracture | History of trauma, history of osteoporosis, pain on percussion |
| Seronegative spondyloarthropathy | Hx of iritis, AM stiffness, improvement with exercise, family Hx |
| GI disease | GI complaints, relation of pain to certain foods, abdominal examination |
| GU disease | GU complaints, bleeding, spotting, unusual discharge, GU examination |
| Myelopathy | Gait difficulties, bowel/bladder dysfunction, UMN signs, spasticity, sensory level |
| Cauda equina syndrome | Bowel/bladder difficulties, saddle anesthesia, decreased anal sphincter tone |
CA – cancer; NSAID – non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; Hx – history; AM – morning; GI – gastrointestinal; GU – genitourinary; UMN – upper motor neuron
Proposed pain provocation signs and their means of detection.
| Pain Provocation Sign | Detection | Suspected Source |
| Segmental Pain Provocation Signs | Palpation, pain provocation tests | Zygapophyseal joint |
| Centralization Signs | End range loading examination | Intervertebral disc |
| Neurodynamic Signs | Neurodynamic Tests | Neural structures |
| Muscle Palpation Signs | Palpation | Myofascial tissues |
Factors presumed to be of greatest importance in the perpetuation of spinal pain.
| Dynamic Instability (impaired motor control) | Fear |
| Oculomotor dysfunction | Catastrophizing |
| Central pain hypersensitivity | Passive coping |
| Depression |
Figure 1Diagnostic algorithm for the application of the DBCDR.
Figure 2Management algorithm for the application of the DBCDR.