Articles: back-pain.
-
The indications for repeated operation in patients with persistent or recurrent pain after lumbosacral spine surgery are not well established. Long-term results have been reported infrequently, and in no case has mean follow-up exceeded 3 years. We report 5-year mean follow-up for a series of repeated operations performed between 1979 and 1983. ⋯ Most patients reduced or eliminated analgesic intake. Statistical analysis (including univariate and multivariate logistic regression) of patient characteristics as prognostic factors showed significant advantages for young patients and for female patients. Favorable outcome also was associated with a history of good results from previous operations, with the absence of epidural scar requiring surgical lysis, with employment before surgery, and with predominance of radicular (as opposed to axial) pain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
-
Orthop. Clin. North Am. · Apr 1991
ReviewMagnetic resonance imaging in the evaluation of low back pain.
Many observers believe that magnetic resonance has become the procedure of choice for lumbar spine imaging. This article includes discussions of technique, normal anatomy, degenerative disc disease, and the use of paramagnetic contrast agents. Numerous figures are provided to illustrate explanations.
-
Orthop. Clin. North Am. · Apr 1991
The tissue origin of low back pain and sciatica: a report of pain response to tissue stimulation during operations on the lumbar spine using local anesthesia.
In an effort to define the origin of low back pain and sciatica, 193 patients were carefully studied using progressive local anesthesia. These patients had surgery for herniated discs, spinal stenoses, or both. Various tissues were stimulated during the performance of these lumbar spinal operations. This article discusses our observations and the results of that study.
-
The clinical relevance of strategies to cope with pain was assessed by means of the Coping Strategy Questionnaire (CSQ). This was presented to a sample of 53 low back pain patients in The Netherlands, who had agreed to participate in a treatment outcome study of a group program consisting of education about pain and a training in relaxation and imaginative pain coping strategies. ⋯ However, at the 6-month follow-up, only pain reduction appeared to be significantly related to pretreatment-follow-up changes on CSQ scores for Perceived Control. It is concluded that a judgment about one's capability to control pain may be as important as the specific pain coping strategies used.
-
The analgesic effectiveness of physical therapy in rheumatology is dependent on the differentiated clinical picture (joint, soft parts, spinal column, musculature) and on the differentiated therapeutic remedy (intensity, duration of single treatments, frequency, duration of therapeutic series). Physico- and kinesitherapy can be distinguished with regard to objective and subjective doses; manual therapy is between them. ⋯ The problem "rheumatism and pain" mainly exists at the level of "chronic"; diagnostics of movement function (articular and muscular functions) on one hand and dosage of therapeutic remedies (drugs and remedies of physiotherapy) on the other are the guidelines. Course (rehabilitation) as well as onset (prevention) of rheumatic clinical pictures determine the further strategy of pain therapy.