Other considerations for failed back surgery syndrome
When scar tissue is not the cause of pain
If
the recurrent pain appears years after spine
surgery, it is unlikely that the pain is due
solely to scar tissue. Scar tissue does not continue
to form years after spine surgery, so it is generally
not considered a cause of late recurrent pain.
Rather, the nerve may be compressed, or “tethered”,
by a small disc herniation or by new bone growing
near the nerve (stenosis).
The clinical presentation of a tethered nerve
includes a positive straight leg-raising test
(i.e., lifting the leg causes increased pain
down the leg). In such cases, repeat decompression
or discectomy surgery will usually lead to good
results.
If there is postoperative leg pain with no evidence
of nerve tethering, simply removing the scar
tissue is unlikely to do any good. This conclusion
is due to the fact that scar tissue is an uncommon
cause of postoperative pain and that scar tissue
tends to form again after repeat spine surgery.
Scar tissue versus other causes of pain after
surgery
Scar tissue can lead to postoperative leg
pain by binding the nerve root. Although the
growth of scar tissue can be limited with interpositional
membranes, this has not been conclusively shown
to lead to better clinical outcomes. Other causes
of continued or recurrent leg pain should be
sought prior to settling on epidural fibrosis
or scar tissue as t he cause of the patient’s
pain following a back surgery.
By: Peter
F. Ullrich, Jr., MD
March 26, 2001 (Updated March
6, 2002) |