Acute Low Back Pain
Glossary
Acute
Low Back Problem: Activity
limitation(s) due to low back
symptoms (back pain or back-related
leg pain) present less than 3
months.
Biofeedback: The
use of auditory and
visual signals reflecting
a patient's muscular
activity to allow the
patient to facilitate
or extinguish this
muscle action. In patients
with low back pain,
the objective is to
reduce pain by reducing
muscle tension.
Cauda
Equina Syndrome: Compression
(usually due to the extrinsic
pressure of a massive,
centrally herniated disc)
on a sheaf of nerve roots
from the lower cord segments,
often resulting in bilateral
motor weakness of the
lower extremities, saddle
anesthesia, and urine
retention or incontinence
from loss of sphincter
function.
Chemonucleolysis: The
injection of a proteolytic
enzyme (e.g., chymopapain)
into the herniated nucleus
pulposus of a disc.
CT-myelography: Computerized
tomography done after
contrast media has been
injected into the dural
sac.
Diathermy: Therapeutic
elevation of the temperature
of deep tissues by means
of high frequency shortwave
or microwaves.
Discography: The
injection of a water-soluble
imaging material directly
into the nucleus pulposus
of a disc to assess the
extent of disc damage
and characterize the
pain response.
Discectomy: The
surgical removal of all
or part of a herniated
intervertebral disc compressing
a nerve root. When microscopic
or visually aided surgical
techniques are used,
this procedure is referred
to as microdiscectomy.
The procedure can also
be done through a small
incision using indirect
visualization (percutaneous
discectomy).
Electromyography
(EMG): An
examination of the electrical
activity of a motor unit,
useful in determining
the site of injury in
a peripheral nerve and
in detecting spinal nerve
root lesions as well
as primary muscle diseases.
Needle EMG involves the
insertion of needle electrodes
into muscle; surface
EMG uses surface electrodes
instead of needle insertion.
Ergonomics: The
study of the proper and
efficient use of the
body in work and recreation,
including the design
and operations of machines
and the physical environment.
F-wave
Tests: The
use of electrodiagnostic
equipment to measure
motor conduction through
nerve roots, most frequently
to assess proximal neuropathies.
Facet
Joints: Synovial
joints formed by the
facets on the articular
processes of contiguous
vertebrae.
H-reflex
Tests: The
use of electrodiagnostic
equipment to measure
sensory conduction of
a stimulus through nerve
roots that then evoke
a motor reflex, commonly
employed to assess S1
radiculopathy.
Herniated
Disc: Herniation
of the central gelatinous
material (nucleus pulposus)
of an intervertebral
disc through its fibrous
outer covering (annulus
fibrosis).
Nerve
Conduction Studies: Tests
of peripheral nerves
performed by stimulating
the nerve at one point
and measuring the action
potential either at another
point along the nerve
(sensory conduction)
or of the muscle innervated
by the nerve (motor conduction).
Neurogenic
Claudication: Symptoms
of leg pain (and occasionally
weakness) on walking
or standing, relieved
by sitting or spinal
flexion, related to neural
compression, usually
spinal stenosis.
Pain
Drawings: Drawings
by patients depicting
the severity, type, and
location of their pain
as a technique for assessing
psychological involvement
in the pain complaints.
Radiculopathy: Dysfunction
of a nerve root often
caused by compression
of the root. Pain, sensory
impairment, weakness
or depression of deep
tendon reflexes may be
noticed in the distribution
of nerves derived from
the involved nerve root.
Saddle
Anesthesia: Loss
of sensation in the skin
over the perineum indicative
of dysfunction of sacral
nerve roots.
Sciatica: Pain
radiating down the leg(s)
below the knee along
the distribution of the
sciatic nerve, usually
related to mechanical
pressure and/or inflammation
of lumbosacral nerve
roots.
Sensory
Evoked Potentials (SEP): The
use of electrical stimuli
applied to specific nerves
or dermatomes to assess
the normalcy of nerve
responses.
Spinal
Manipulation: Manual
therapy for symptomatic
relief and functional
improvement of the back
in which loads are applied
to the spine using short
or long lever methods.
The selected spinal joint
is moved to its end range
of voluntary motion,
followed by application
of an impulse load.
Spinal
Stenosis: A
narrowing of the spinal
canal that may produce
a bony constriction of
the cauda equina and
the emerging nerve roots.
Spondylolisthesis: Forward
subluxation of the body
of a lumbar vertebra
on the vertebra below.
Spondylolysis: A
fracture or cleft in
the vertebral body, often
through the posterior
vertebral arch, loosening
its normally firm attachment
to contiguous vertebrae.
Straight
Leg Raising (SLR):
A
procedure of stretching
the sciatic nerve to
see if radicular symptomatology
is reproduced. Each hip
is alternately flexed
with the knee extended;
the extent to which each
leg can be lifted is
noted. Reproduction of
the patient's sciatica
when the unaffected leg
is lifted is evidence
of a positive "crossed" straight
leg raising test.
Thermography: A
procedure that images
the infrared radiation
(heat) emitted from
body surfaces. In patients
with low back problems,
thermographic image
patterns of the back
and lower extremities
are measured.
Transcutaneous
Electrical Nerve Stimulation
(TENS): A
small battery-operated
device, worn by the patient,
which provides continuous
electrical pulses via
surface electrodes with
the goal of providing
symptomatic relief by
modifying pain perception.
Traction: When
used for low back problems,
intermittent or continuous
force is applied along
the axis of the spine
in an attempt to elongate
the spine. The type most
commonly used for low
back problems is pelvic
traction in which a girdle
around the patient's
pelvis is attached to
weights hung at the foot
of the bed.
Trigger
Point: A
well localized point
of tenderness. In low
back problems, these
points are usually located
in the paravertebral
areas.
Visual
Analog Scales: A
visual means by which
a patient can quantify
pain. The patient marks
a point corresponding
to the intensity of his
pain on a line, one end
of which represents no
pain and the other end,
severe, incapacitating
pain.