| Literature DB >> 32613192 |
Maurizio Fornari1, Scott C Robertson2, Paulo Pereira3, Mehmet Zileli4, Carla D Anania1, Ana Ferreira3, Silvano Ferrari5, Roberto Gatti5, Francesco Costa1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) is a progressive disease with potentially dangerous consequences that affect quality of life. Despite the detailed literature, natural history is unpredictable. This uncertainty presents a challenge making the correct management decisions, especially in patients with mild to moderate symptoms, regarding conservative or surgical treatment. This article focused on conservative treatment for degenerative LSS.Entities:
Keywords: Conservative treatment; Follow-up of LSS; Guidelines; LBP, Low back pain; LS, Likert scale; LSS; LSS, Lumbar spinal stenosis; Lumbar spinal stenosis; PT, Physical therapy; Percutaneous pain relief techniques; RCT, Randomized controlled trial; WFNS, World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies
Year: 2020 PMID: 32613192 PMCID: PMC7322792 DOI: 10.1016/j.wnsx.2020.100079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Neurosurg X ISSN: 2590-1397
Figure 1Literature review process. LSS, lumbar spinal stenosis.
Multimodal Physical Therapy for Conservative Treatment of Lumbar Spinal Stenosis
| Physical Therapy Modality | Examples |
|---|---|
| Exercises | Flexion-extension,walking, cycling |
| Manual therapy | Mobilization, manipulation, traction |
| Instrumental physical therapies | Ultrasound, TENS, heat pack |
| Other modalities | Acupuncture, aquatic therapy, psychosocial intervention, transcutaneous tibial nerve stimulation |
| Corset and braces | |
| Education and information |
TENS, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation.
Figure 2Most used exercises to reduce pain and maximize function by improving lumbar spine and lower extremity flexibility.
Literature Review on Percutaneous Pain Relief Techniques with Main Conclusions
| Author, Year | Journal (JIF 2017) | Study Design | Included | Comparison/Analysis | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Randomized Controlled Trials | |||||
| Manchikanti et al., 2012 | Randomized, double-blind, active-controlled trial | 100 patients | Caudal local anesthetic versus local anesthetic + steroid | Both modalities provide relief in modest proportion of patients | |
| Friedly et al., 2014 | Multicenter randomized, double-blind controlled trial | 400 patients | Local anesthetic versus local anesthetic + steroid | No differences between groups. Adding a steroid to local anesthetic offered minimal or no short-term benefits | |
| Manchikanti et al., 2015 | Randomized, double-blind, active-controlled trial | 120 patients | Local anesthetic versus local anesthetic + steroid | No differences between groups. Relief in significant proportion of patients | |
| Friedly et al., 2017 | Multicenter randomized, double-blind controlled trial | 400 patients | Local anesthetic versus local anesthetic + steroid | No difference between groups. Repeated procedures offered no additional long-term benefit | |
| Systematic Reviews with or without Meta-Analysis | |||||
| Manchikanti et al., 2013 | Systematic review | 2 RCTs +1 nonrandomized trial | Review of literature to provide guidelines for interventional techniques in chronic spinal pain | Evidence is considered fair for short- and long-term relief with local anesthetic and steroids in spinal stenosis | |
| Liu et al., 2015 | Systematic review and meta-analysis | 10 RCTs | Steroid injection for spinal stenosis | Epidural steroid injections provide limited short- and long-term benefits in LSS patients | |
| Meng et al., 2015 | Systematic review and meta-analysis | 13 RCTs | Local anesthetic versus anesthetic + steroids | Inclusion of steroids confers no advantage compared with local anesthetic alone. Both provide significant pain relief and functional improvement in chronic LBP | |
| Manchikanti et al., 2015 | Systematic review | 7 RCTs | Compare caudal versus interlaminar versus transforaminal epidural approaches for LSS | Epidural injections with local anesthetic alone or with local anesthetic with steroids offer short- and long-term relief of LBP and lower extremity pain for patients with lumbar central spinal stenosis. Interlaminar approach appears to be superior to caudal, and caudal approach appears to be superior to transforaminal | |
| Kaye et al., 2015 | Systematic review | 7 trials for LSS | Efficacy of epidural injections in managing chronic spinal pain | Long-term effectiveness of caudal and interlaminar epidural injections and short-term effectiveness of transforaminal approach | |
| Manchikanti et al., 2016 | Systematic review and meta-analysis | 39 RCTs for LSS and radiculopathy | Epidural injections for lumbar radiculopathy and spinal stenosis: saline with steroid versus local anesthetic versus anesthetic + steroid | Epidural corticosteroid injections for radiculopathy or spinal stenosis with sodium chloride solution or bupivacaine were shown to be ineffective. Lidocaine alone or lidocaine in conjunction with steroids was significantly effective | |
| Zaina et al., 2016 | Systematic review | 5 RCTs | Surgery versus epidural steroid injection | Low-quality level of evidence. Minimally invasive surgical decompression provides better pain reduction and improves functional mobility versus epidural steroid injections | |
| Deer et al., 2019 | Guidelines/consensus | — | Efficacy of injection therapy for symptomatic LSS | Short- to intermediate-term benefit of epidural injections for symptomatic treatment of LSS. Benefit of caudal and interlaminar injections (local anesthetic only and local anesthetic with steroid) and transforaminal injections of local anesthetic with or without steroid. Patients exhibiting shorter-term relief of <3 months should not proceed with further injection therapy but rather continue down treatment algorithm to a treatment option directed at decompression | |
JIF, journal impact factor; RCT, randomized controlled trial; LSS, lumbar spinal stenosis; LBP, low back pain.
World Federation of Neurosurgical Societies Spine Committee Recommendations on Conservative Treatment and Percutaneous Pain Relief Technique
| Recommendations for Conservative Treatment or Follow-Up for LSS |
| • In nonsevere clinical conditions a conservative approach based on at least 3 weeks of therapeutic exercise may be the first therapeutic choice |
| • Medical/interventional treatment should be preferred to surgical treatment in patients with spinal stenosis with mild symptoms |
| • Physical therapy should consist of multimodal approaches |
| • If conservative treatment is chosen, surgery should be considered in cases in which the clinical condition does not change in 3 months |
| • There are some cases in which immediate surgical treatment can be indicated |
| Recommendations for Percutaneous Pain Relief Techniques for LSS |
| • Facet joint injections provide a useful diagnostic tool for LBP |
| • The literature supports short- to intermediate-term benefits of epidural injections for symptomatic treatment of LSS |
| • Inclusion of steroids does not confer a benefit compared with local anesthetic alone in epidural injections for symptomatic treatment of LSS |
| • For patients with symptomatic relief lasting <3 months after epidural injections, proceeding with further injections is not recommended |
LSS, lumbar spinal stenosis; LBP, low back pain.