Lumbar discography for back pain diagnosis
Lumbar discography is an injection technique used to
evaluate patients with back pain who have not responded
to extensive conservative care regimens. The most common
use of discography is for surgical planning prior to
a lumbar fusion.
This diagnostic procedure also called a discogram
is a controversial one.
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The protagonists of discography believe the information
gleaned from this examination is unobtainable any
other way.
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The procedures antagonists feel the responses
evoked from disc pressurization are not useful in
evaluating back pain patients.
This article does not extol the use of discography;
rather it addresses some aspects of the procedure that
may make a patient more at ease with what is an uncomfortable
exam.
Indications for a discogram
The indications for getting a discogram prior to
a lumbar fusion surgery are extremely variable amongst
spine surgeons. Ordering the procedure depends on access
to a skilled discographer. A discogram is basically
a very subjective test, and if there are no experienced
discographers available, then the spine surgeon may forego
the test since a poorly done discogram does not yield
any useful information.
Lumbar discography is considered for patients who,
despite extensive conservative treatment, have disabling
low back pain, groin pain, hip pain, and/or leg pain.
When a variety of spinal diagnostic procedures have
failed to elucidate the primary pain generator,
these individuals may benefit from lumbar discography
especially if spine surgery is contemplated.
Unique aspects of discography
It should be understood that the discogram is less
about the anatomy of the disc (what the disc looks like)
and more about its physiology (determining if the disc
is painful). It is well known to discographers that
a really abnormal looking disc may not be painful
and a minimally disrupted disc may be associated with
severe pain. It is impossible to definitively diagnose
a painful disc without performing a discogram.
The Lumbar MRI and CT Myelogram are very sensitive
anatomic tests but are not very specific in defining
actual pain generators. The lumbar discogram, if performed
properly, is designed to induce pain in a sensitive
disc. A spinal fusion procedure that is designed to
obliterate an internally disrupted, painful disc (pain
generator) would not be the procedure of choice if pressurization
of the disc didnt reproduce the patients
clinical discomfort. The spine surgeon needs to be absolutely
sure that the level or levels being fused are responsible
for the patients pain.
If the fused levels were not initially painful, spine surgery
will not help, and the patient will be left with a fused
spine and probably still be in pain. Since a spine fusion
procedure carries a significant level of risk and healing
time, the more information that can be obtained prior
to back surgery the better.
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