• Eur Spine J · Feb 2010

    Laser-evoked potentials: prognostic relevance of pain pathway defects in patients with acute radiculopathy.

    • Markus Quante, Jürgen Lorenz, and Michael Hauck.
    • Specialist Centre for Spinal Surgery, Hospital Neustadt, Neustadt in Holstein, Germany. doktor_markus_quante@yahoo.de
    • Eur Spine J. 2010 Feb 1; 19 (2): 270-8.

    AbstractThe radicular pain syndrome is a major problem in public health care that can lead to chronic back and leg pain in 30%. Ischalgia and back pain are the most prominent signs of dorsal root affection. Until now, no clinical or neurophysiological test procedure exists that evaluates the function of the dorsal root and predicts the prognosis of patients suffering from RPS. We have recently demonstrated that laser-evoked potentials (LEP) are able to demonstrate dorsal root damage. With this study, we investigated 54 patients with acute radicular symptoms and compared LEP parameters (side to side difference of latency and amplitude, transformed to a z-score) with their state of health after 3 months to calculate their predictive value for outcome prognosis. Most significantly, the latency difference between the LEP of the affected dermatome relative to the contralateral healthy dermatome was able to predict the prognosis. Latency z score above two demonstrates a 91% specificity (33% sensitivity) for a poor outcome at 3 months. A significant relation between amplitude changes and the main outcome measure could not be shown. Only extreme changes (z score >10) in amplitude show a high specificity for the persistence of ischialgia in particular (specificity 0.94; sensitivity 0.35). All other parameters, such as clinical scores or other LEP parameters, were not able to predict the outcome of patients. We propose that clinical testing using LEP with latency analysis is a useful tool for estimating the course of disease, so that patients with poor predictive parameters can be treated more invasively at early disease stages to avoid persistence of radiculopathy.

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