| Literature DB >> 30956911 |
Md Abu B Siddiq1, Mohammad A Rahim2, Md Tariqul I Khan3, Ahm Zakir H Shikder4.
Abstract
Low back pain (LBP) is a frequent complaint in the working milieu of pain physicians. Common LBP generators are the lumbar spine, soft tissues around the spine, and intra-abdominal viscera; however, in recent times, lumbar spine ligament (LL) degeneration is increasingly getting more coverage as an important LBP source. Among various LLs, interspinous and supraspinatus ligaments' sprain-degeneration can perpetuate localized central LBP as described in the present case study. Localized LL sprain-degeneration in association with radiating LBP from prolapsed lumbar intervertebral disc (PLID) compressing adjacent nerve roots might further impair a patient's quality of life. In the present report, we describe both LL sprain-degeneration and PLID (a dual source of LBP) in a 26-year-old Bangladeshi woman; physicians often fail to notice this combination in their regular clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: intervertebral disc degeneration; intervertebral disc disease; ligament sprain; low back pain; lumbosacral region
Year: 2019 PMID: 30956911 PMCID: PMC6436675 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.3958
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of lumbosacral spine.
On longitudinal mid-sagittal scanning of the lumbosacral spine, T2-image depicts intervertebral disc degeneration and herniation between L5 and S1 vertebral bodies (asterisk) and inter-spinous ligament degeneration (high intensity on T2 image) (white arrow).
Figure 2Surface marking demonstrates distance of different lumbar spine bony landmarks from sacral cornua measured under high-frequency (curvilinear) ultrasonogram.
A. Surface marking demonstrates distance of different lumbar spine landmarks revealing under high-frequency (curvilinear) ultrasonogram, where 0, 4, 8, 11 cm, respectively, indicates level of sacral cornua, sacral promontory, L5 spinous process, and L4 spinous process; asterisk indicates sacroiliac joint (right). B. On ultrasonogram, asterisks reveal posterior acoustic shadowing of sacral 1, L5, L4, L3 spinous process (from right to left), and white arrow indicates hyperechoic interspinous spaces between hypoechoic posterior acoustic shadowing for spinous processes.