| Literature DB >> 31131347 |
Kengo Fujii1,2, Masashi Yamazaki2, James D Kang3, Makarand V Risbud4, Samuel K Cho1, Sheeraz A Qureshi5, Andrew C Hecht1, James C Iatridis1.
Abstract
Discogenic back pain is multifactorial; hence, physicians often struggle to identify the underlying source of the pain. As a result, discogenic back pain is often hard to treat-even more so when clinical treatment strategies are of questionable efficacy. Based on a broad literature review, our aim was to define discogenic back pain into a series of more specific and interacting pathologies, and to highlight the need to develop novel approaches and treatment strategies for this challenging and unmet clinical need. Discogenic pain involves degenerative changes of the intervertebral disc, including structural defects that result in biomechanical instability and inflammation. These degenerative changes in intervertebral discs closely intersect with the peripheral and central nervous systems to cause nerve sensitization and ingrowth; eventually central sensitization results in a chronic pain condition. Existing imaging modalities are nonspecific to pain symptoms, whereas discography methods that are more specific have known comorbidities based on intervertebral disc puncture and injection. As a result, alternative noninvasive and specific diagnostic methods are needed to better diagnose and identify specific conditions and sources of pain that can be more directly treated. Currently, there are many treatments/interventions for discogenic back pain. Nevertheless, many surgical approaches for discogenic pain have limited efficacy, thus accentuating the need for the development of novel treatments. Regenerative therapies, such as biologics, cell-based therapy, intervertebral disc repair, and gene-based therapy, offer the most promise and have many advantages over current therapies.Entities:
Keywords: DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA; DISC DEGENERATION; DISCOGENIC BACK PAIN; INTERVERTEBRAL DISC; LOW BACK PAIN
Year: 2019 PMID: 31131347 PMCID: PMC6524679 DOI: 10.1002/jbm4.10180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JBMR Plus ISSN: 2473-4039
Figure 1Categorization of back pain and disc degeneration conditions with elaboration on the origins of pain.
Factors to Distinguish Intervertebral Disc (IVD) Aging and IVD Degeneration in Their Early Stages
| IVD aging | IVD degeneration |
|---|---|
| Loss of proteoglycans and water content Increased collagen crosslinking and advanced glycation end‐product accumulation | Proinflammatory cytokines, nociceptive stimuli (nitric oxide, leukotrienes, prostaglandin E, lactic acid) |
| Endplate sclerosis Hypo‐osmolarity and reduced nutrition Reduced cellularity and increased cellular senescense | Injury and neurovascular ingrowth Pathological structural defects Biomechanical dysfunction |
| Dysregulated nutrient sensing Signaling of NF‐κB, mitogen‐activated protein kinases |
Figure 2Origins of discogenic pain involving early and late degenerative changes of the intervertebral disc that interact with the peripheral and central nervous systems. The source of disc degeneration involves genetic predisposition, metabolic disorders, dysregulated signaling as well as mechanical overload, and oxidative stresses to drive the biomechanical injury, instability, and inflammation of degenerated discs. The interaction of intervertebral disc degeneration with the peripheral nervous system, including dorsal root ganglion, and with the central nervous system, including the dorsal horn of the spinal cord, can result in increased sensitization, nerve in growth, and central sensitization as discogenic pain advances from an acute to a chronic condition.