Literature DB >> 9816715

Application of spinal pain mapping in the diagnosis of low back pain--analysis of 104 cases.

W W Pang1, M S Mok, M L Lin, D P Chang, M H Hwang.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Low back pain is probably the most common pain problem seen in a general pain clinic and the cause of low back pain can be enigmatic at times. Often the pain sources are difficult to identify with the conventional diagnostic modalities. Spinal pain mapping is a sequence of well organized nerve block procedures. We undertook this study to evaluate the usefulness of this modality in diagnosing low back pain of uncertain etiology.
METHODS: In this prospective study, 104 consecutive adult patients who underwent spinal pain mapping were examined and analyzed. All patients had intractable low back pain of undetermined etiology after medical history, physical examination and 4-view roentgenographic evaluation of the lumbar spine had been undertaken to locate it. In addition, 41 patients (39%) had one or more of the following tests done, which included CT, MRI, EMG/NC but all failed to delineate the causes of the pain. All patients failed to respond to the conservative therapies.
RESULTS: With pain mapping the source of pain was found to be caused by sacro-iliac joint in 6%, lumbar nerve root in 20%, facet joint in 24%, combined lumbar nerve root and facet disease in 24%, internal disc disorder in 7%, combined facet and sacro-iliac joint in 4% and lumbar sympathetic dystrophy in 2% of patients. Pain mapping failed to demonstrate the causes of the pain in the remaining 13% of the patients.
CONCLUSIONS: Considering the difficult nature of this group of patients, spinal pain mapping provided a useful functional approach to the diagnosis of low back pain with obscure etiology in 87% of patients in our series.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1998        PMID: 9816715

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Anaesthesiol Sin        ISSN: 0254-1319


  7 in total

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4.  Randomized sham-controlled, double-blind, multicenter clinical trial on the effect of percutaneous radiofrequency at the ramus communicans for lumbar disc pain.

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6.  Image-guided lumbar facet joint infiltration in nonradicular low back pain.

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7.  The potential impact of various diagnostic strategies in cases of chronic pain syndromes associated with lumbar spine degeneration.

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  7 in total

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