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Low Back Terminology
Listed below are some terms you may have heard in
conversations about the low back.
Arthritis of the Spine: Appropriate use of the term
"arthritis", which means inflammation of joints (not
discs), is difficult when applied to the spine because there are
many causes for pain in the spine only one of which is joint
inflammation. Unlike joints elsewhere such as the elbow, hip or
finger joints which when painful and tender almost always
signify arthritis (since not much else causes pain in those
joints), the spinal joints are deep below the skin and thick
back muscles. They cannot be felt and have no particular pain
characteristics that allow us to say that this person’s back
pain is due to joint inflammation (arthritis) while that person’s
is due to disc bulging or ligament strain. Until a scan is
performed to try to clarify the origin of back pain, it is
mostly a guessing game as to the cause of the back pain. Many
doctors use the term "arthritis" to cover low back
pain without significant leg pain to lessen your concern while
the common initial treatments are pursued (and which will tend
to work in most people no matter what the cause of the back
pain).
CAT Scan (Computer Assisted Tomography):
A series of computerized pictures or slices of the body obtained
by doing multiple X-rays. This technique uses the subtle
differences in density between bone, fat, nerves, muscles,
ligaments, spinal fluid and tumors to create an anatomical
picture of an area such as the low back and all the structures
in and around the spine.
MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) Scan:
Computerized pictures of the spine similar to those obtained by
a CAT scan but using magnetism rather than X-rays. It is based
on the technique of briefly magnetizing your body which imparts
energy to the electrons in the atoms of which you are composed
and puts them slightly and safely out of their usual orbit
around the atomic nucleus. When the magnetism is turned off,
those electrons go back to their usual location and emit energy
that is detected by the machine which turns it into pictures. If
this seems somewhat magical, don’t feel alone. We
neurosurgeons don’t understand it well either, but we can sure
use the pictures to help us to know what is wrong with you and
what we can do to help you.
Cortisone shots: Technique of therapy designed to
bathe a structure with concentrated cortisone, a very strong
anti-inflammation agent, to reduce presumably inflamed
structures that are causing pain because of that inflammation.
Low back cortisone shots include trigger point injections
into tender muscles or ligaments, epidural injections
into the spinal canal to bathe the discs and nerves within
spinal canal, joint injections near the spinal joints and
nerve block injections near the spinal nerves as they
exit the spine to go to the legs. It is the hope that the
problem with the target structure is an inflammation which can
be reversed by the cortisone.
Disc: Think of the discs in your low back as about
the size and shape of a hockey puck (3 inches in diameter and
about ¾ inch high) made up of a fairly tough skin inside of
which is a pulp (nucleus pulposis—center pulp) that looks and
feels like tough crab meat. These discs are found between all
the vertebrae (intervertebral) acting like a shimmy or shock
absorber and allowing movement between the vertebrae so we can
bend.
Disc Degeneration: An aging process that occurs in
all discs over time. This happens to us all eventually but can
be hastened by a straining back injury. A degenerated disc
usually contains less water and looks darker on MRI scans and
often loses some of its height and bulges a little. If it has
been bulging a little for a long time, the vertebrae on either
side of a disc frequently form a little bone spur in reaction to
the bulging. We can see the little spurs on regular X-rays and
know the disc degeneration must be present. We call those little
spurs and the implied disc degeneration "Spondylosis"
(we are expected to use fancy terms). Most gradual disc
degeneration that occurs over time is not painful but merely an
indication of years of use.
Discogram: A diagnostic procedure in which a narrow
needle is introduced into a disc under local anesthesia and then
a fluid substance is injected into the disc to raise the
pressure inside the disc. This is usually done to see if the
disc suspected of causing chronic low back pain is indeed the
culprit. A positive discogram reproduces your usual back pain
type and location whereas a negative one doesn’t hurt or
briefly causes an entirely new and unusual pain. Frequently used
as a pre-fusion test to identify which structures to fuse.
Herniated disc: Condition when the skin of the disc
around its circumference weakens with an injury, a strain or
with age and begins to bulge outward. All discs bulge a little
with age and usually don’t cause pain but when they bulge (herniate)
suddenly with an injury or strain or if they bulge a lot with
age, they can cause back pain. If they bulge or herniate enough
to reach the nerves to the legs which lie very close to them, a
sciatica or pinched nerve (pain running down the leg to the calf
or below) can occur.
Ruptured disc: Condition when the central pulp
(nucleus pulposis) of a disc breaks through the skin of the disc
and usually compresses (pinches) a nearby nerve causing
sciatica. Usually not dangerous but can be pretty painful, can
cause damage to bladder and bowel nerves and is commonly hard to
beat short of surgery.
Lumbago: An old term for low back pain when due to
strains of the sacro-iliac ligaments which connect the pelvic
bones in the lowest part of the back. Also called sacro-ilitis
meaning an inflammation of those ligaments.
Spinal joint: Each vertebra is connected to the next
one by a disc, some ligaments and two joints called facet or
apophyseal joints. When these joints get inflamed with age or
injury (arthritis=inflamed joints) they cause back pain,
sometimes leg pain, and frequently respond to anti-inflammatory
(arthritis) medications such as aspirin, ibuprofen, naprosyn or
numerous other ones. When these joints significantly thicken
with age, they can be the predominant cause of spinal stenosis.
Spinal stenosis: Usually caused by the gradual aging
of the ligaments, joints and discs of the spine which narrows
the central canal of the spine in which run the nerves to the
legs so that leg pain, tingling or numbness occurs, usually when
standing or walking, and which is commonly relieved by sitting
down.
Sprain: A synonym for strain.
Scoliosis: Curvature of the spine which is almost always
congenital (you were born with it) and commonly causes back pain
when severe and almost never when mild.
Spondylolisthesis: Condition when the vertebrae are
not lined up neatly right above one another. Most common at the
junction of the last lumbar vertebra and the sacrum (tail bone)
and usually not symptomatic.
Spondylolysis: Condition in which parts of a vertebra
failed to form correctly in the womb. Usually doesn’t cause
pain but can lead to spondylolithesis as it weakens the
connections between vertebrae.
Spondylosis: Fancy name for disc bulging or mild
herniation that has been present for a long time so that the
spine vertebrae form reactive bone spurs which are easily seen
on regular X-rays. Everyone gets this as we get older and it
usually is not particularly symptomatic.
Spondylitis: 1850 term for inflammation of the
vertebrae which almost never happens nowadays.
Slippage of the spine: Common synonym for
Spondylolisthesis.
Slipped disc: Bad term usually implying a disc
herniation.
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