Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

The Prevalence and Clinical Features of Internal Disc Disruption in Patients With Chronic Low Back Pain

769

Citations

0

References

1995

Year

TLDR

The study aimed to determine whether patients with chronic low back pain meet the International Association for the Study of Pain criteria for internal disc disruption and whether conventional clinical features can identify this condition. A cross‑sectional analytic study of 92 chronic low back pain patients was conducted, involving standard physical exams, provocation discography, and CT discography at at least two levels to apply the International Association for the Study of Pain diagnostic criteria for internal disc disruption. Internal disc disruption was identified in 39% of patients, predominantly at L5‑S1 and L4‑L5, yet none of the conventional clinical tests could distinguish these patients from others.

Abstract

This was a cross-sectional analytic study of patients with chronic low back pain.To investigate whether the criteria for internal disc disruption, as adopted by the International Association for the Study of Pain, could be satisfied in patients with chronic low back pain and to test whether there were any conventional clinical features that could identify this condition.Internal disc disruption has been postulated as an important cause of low back pain. To diagnose this condition, the International Association for the Study of Pain taxonomy requires that pain be reproduced on provocation discography and that computed tomography discography reveal internal disc disruption, provided that as a control, stimulation of at least one other disc fails to reproduce pain.Ninety-two consecutive patients with chronic low back pain and no history of previous lumbar surgery were studied. Each patient underwent a standard physical examination. Computed tomography discography was performed at a minimum of two levels.The diagnostic criteria for internal disc disruption were fully satisfied in 39% of patients, most commonly at L5-S1 and L4-L5. None of the clinical tests used could differentiate between those patients with internal disc disruption and other patients.A diagnosis of internal disc disruption can be made in a significant proportion of patients with chronic low back pain, but no conventional clinical test can discriminate patients with internal disc disruption from patients with other conditions.