This Medical Video: Common Benign Pain Syndromes--Symptoms and Etiology
1.
Non-specific musculoskeletal pain This is the most common cause of
back pain. Patients present with lumbar area pain that does not
radiate, is worse with activity, and improves with rest. There may
or may not be a clear history of antecedent over use or increased
activity. The pain is presumably caused by irritation of the
paraspinal muscles, ligaments or vertebral body articulations.
However, a precise etiology is difficulty to identify.
2. Radicular
Symptoms Often referred to as sciatica, this is a pain syndrome
caused by irritation of one of the nerve roots as it exits the
spinal column. The root can become inflamed as a result of a
compromised neuroforamina (e.g. bony osteophyte that limits size of
the opening) or a herniated disc (the fibrosis tears, allowing the
propulsus to squeeze out and push on the adjacent root). Sometimes,
its not precisely clear what has lead to the irritation. In any
case, patients report a burning/electric shock type pain that starts
in the low back, traveling down the buttocks and along the back of
the leg, radiating below the knee. The most commonly affected nerve
roots are L5 and S1.
3. Spinal Stenosis Pain starts in the low
back and radiates down the buttocks bilaterally, continuing along
the backs of both legs. Symptoms are usually worse with walking and
improve when the patient bends forward. Patients may describe that
they relieve symptoms by leaning forward on their shopping carts
when walking in a super market. This is caused by spinal stenosis, a
narrowing of the central canal that holds the spinal cord. The
limited amount of space puts pressure on the nerve roots when the
patient walks, causing the symptoms (referred to as neurogenic
claudication). Spinal stenosis can be congenital or develop over
years as a result of djd of the spine. As opposed to true
claudication (pain in calfs/lower legs due to arterial
insufficiency), pain resolves very quickly when person stops walking
and assumes upright position. Also, peripheral pulses should be
normal.
4. Mixed symptoms In some patients, more then one process
may co-exist, causing elements of more then one symptom syndrome to
co-exist.