Scar tissue and continued pain
after back surgery
Scar tissue formation is part of the normal
healing process after a surgical intervention.
While scar tissue can be a cause of pain, in
and of itself it is rarely painful, since the
tissue contains no nerve endings. Rather, the
principal mechanism of pain is thought to be
the binding of the lumbar nerve root by fibrous
adhesions, called epidural fibrosis.
These fibrous adhesions are a common occurrence
after spine surgery, and occur for patients with
successful surgical outcomes as well as for patients
with continued or recurrent leg pain and back
pain. For this reason, the importance of scar
tissue or epidural fibrosis as a potential cause
of continued pain after surgery is controversial.
One common occurrence is when a patient still
has pain postoperatively and the only remarkable
finding on a new MRI scan is that there is now
scar tissue. It may therefore be assumed that
the scar tissue is now causing the patient’s
pain. However, if the patient’s pain feels
the same as it did preoperatively (and there
was no scar tissue at that time) why is it now
assumed be the cause of the patient’s symptoms?
It is far more reasonable to assume that the
original cause of the patient’s pain was
not addressed by the surgery.
The one time that scar tissue (epidural fibrosis)
may be symptomatic is for a patient who initially
does well after a discectomy or a decompression,
only to have recurrent pain come on slowly between
6 to 12 weeks after surgery. This is the time
period that scar tissue takes to form.
Pain that starts years after surgery, or pain
that continues after surgery and is never relieved,
is not from scar tissue. |