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Issues in Pain Management: The Patient with Chronic Low Back Pain Robin Hamill-Ruth

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Issues in Pain Management:. The Patient with Chronic Low Back Pain. Robin Hamill-Ruth. Chronic Low Back Pain. Demographics Anatomy Evaluation Management Options Medical Adjunctive therapies Interventional Case Reports. Chronic LBP: Demographics. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Issues in Pain Management:

Issues in Pain Management:

The Patient with

Chronic Low Back Pain

Robin Hamill-Ruth

Page 2: Issues in Pain Management:

Chronic Low Back Pain

• Demographics• Anatomy• Evaluation• Management Options

– Medical– Adjunctive therapies– Interventional

• Case Reports

Page 3: Issues in Pain Management:
Page 4: Issues in Pain Management:

Chronic LBP: Demographics

• 80% of Americans experience LBP at some point during their lifetime.

• Annual prevalence of LBP about 30%• Most common cause of disability under age 45• Accounts for 12.5% of all sick days (Frank, 1993)

• Second most common reason for visits to MD (Hart, 1995)

• 5th leading cause of hospital admission (Taylor, 1994)

Page 5: Issues in Pain Management:

Chronic LBP: Demographics

• Each year, 3-4% of population is temporarily disabled, 1% of working age population is permanently, totally disabled

• Annual cost to US in 1980 estimated at 85 million dollars/year

• Between 1971 and 1981, # disabled grew 14 times the rate of population growth

• Prevalence rising with increasing age up to 65 years after which it declines

Page 6: Issues in Pain Management:

Chronic LBP: The Good News?

• Recovery from LBP– 60-70% recover by 6 weeks– 80-90% improve by 12 weeks– Recovery after 12 weeks is “slow and uncertain”– Those with isolated LBP recover more quickly

than those with sciatica– non-work related back symptoms cause less lost

time from work than work related symptoms

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Differential Dx of LBP and Sciatica• Sacroiliitis, SI dysfunction• Piriformis syndrome• Iliolumbar syndrome• Quadratus lumborum syndrome• Trochanteric bursitis• Ischiogluteal bursitis• Facet syndrome• Meralgia paresthetica• Fibromyositis/Fibromyalgia• GI, GU, Vascular, Intraabdominal

Page 11: Issues in Pain Management:

Assessment: History

• S = site

• C = character

• R = radiation

• O = onset• D = discriminating features

(time course, what aggravates, what relieves, etc)

Page 12: Issues in Pain Management:

Confounding Conditions

• Depression, grief

• Confusion, memory deficits

• Medical conditions– ASCVD, DM, Obesity, CRF, COPD, Sleep apnea

• Psycho-socio-economics• money• transportation• other responsibilities• litigation, disability worker’s comp issues

Page 13: Issues in Pain Management:

“Quantifying” Pain

• Assessment– VAS (verbal, visual)

• pain• sleep• mood• function

– Draw your pain– Self, significant other report– Pain scales, inventories

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History 2

• Past medications including dose, response, why stopped

• Past interventions and therapies

• Current meds, allergies

• Past med history

• ROS

• Social, work history

Page 18: Issues in Pain Management:

Physical Exam

• General

• Spine visual, palpation, percussion

• Posture, gait, movement during change in position

• Neuro (sensation, strength, tone, reflexes)

• ROM, flexibility

• Provacative maneuvers (eg. SLR, distracted SLR, Patrick’s, facet loading)

• Abdomen, chest, vascular, adjacent joints

Page 19: Issues in Pain Management:

Waddell’s Signs: Nonorganic Pathology

1.Nonanatomic tenderness

2.Simulation test (axial loading)

3.Distraction sign (eg. SLR v. DSLR)

4.Regional sensory or motor disturbance (stocking distrib, diffuse motor weakness)

5.Overreaction

3+ positive => poor outcome to spine surgery

Page 20: Issues in Pain Management:

Radiologic Evaluation

• Plain Films

• MRI

• CT

• CT Myelogram

• Discogram

• Angio- and venograms

Page 21: Issues in Pain Management:

Goals of Therapy• Educate the patient

– differential diagnosis

– management options

– realistic goals, pacing

• Address sleep dysfunction

• Manage depression• Improve function physically, emotionally,

socially

• Decrease pain

Page 22: Issues in Pain Management:

Pharmacologic Options• Acetaminophen

– Beware of other sources, toxic doses, other hepatotoxic agents

• Anti-inflammatory Agents: Nonspecific – Piroxicam, Indocin, Ketorolac

– Naproxen

– Ibuprofen

– Diclofenac, Nabumetone

• Cox II specific agents– Rofecoxib, Celecoxib, Parecoxib, Etoricoxib,

Valdecoxib, etc

Page 23: Issues in Pain Management:

NSAIDs

• Advantages: – antiinflammatory, analgesic, limited

sedation, non-addicting, +cheap, available OTC

• Concerns: – available OTC in multiple preps, GI effects,

renal and hepatic toxicity, platelet effects, fluid retention

Page 24: Issues in Pain Management:

Adjuvant Medications: Steroids

• Steroids– Oral, injection, topical, iontophoresis– 3 doses of depo prep over 4-6 weeks, 4 mo. holiday– Concerns:

• Adrenal suppression• Effect on glucose (DM), sodium excretion

(HTN, CHF)• Osteoporosis• Altered wound healing, immunity

Page 25: Issues in Pain Management:

Adjuvant Medications

• Antidepressants– TCAs (elavil, doxepin, nortrip): v. low dose

• sleep, anti-neuropathic effect• ataxia, orthostasis, constipation

– Trazodone• low dose, primarily for sleep

– SSRIs (Paxil, Prozac)– SNRIs (Effexor)

Page 26: Issues in Pain Management:

Adjuvant Medications• Anticonvulsants

– Pro: Neuropathic pain: lancinating, burning– Con: Ataxia, sedation, confusion (esp elderly)

• Drugs– Carbamazepine (Tegretol)– Gabapentin (Neurontin)– Lamotrigine (Lamictal)– Topiramate (Topomax)– Trileptal, etc– Clonazepam

Page 27: Issues in Pain Management:

Medications: Tramadol

• Tramadol (Ultram)– opiate effects– serotonergic effects– Max dose: 400 mg/day

• Problems– Lowered seizure threshold– Increased risk of seizures with TCA > SSRI– ? non-addicting

Page 28: Issues in Pain Management:

Adjuvant Medications

• Muscle Relaxants– Muscle spasm (acute strain/sprain,

fibromyalgia)– Spasticity due to denervation (baclofen,

dantrolene)– Secondary effects:

– Sleep, anxiolysis– anti-neuropathic effect (baclofen)

Page 29: Issues in Pain Management:

Adjuvant Medications

• Topical agents– NSAID preparations– Capsaicin– Lidoderm– Cica-care type skin covers– Commercial OTC preps

Page 30: Issues in Pain Management:

Medications: Opiates

• Chronic Opiate Therapy– Trial of short-acting medication ??

• Darvocet• Hydrocodone (Vicodin, Lortab)• Oxycodone (Roxicodone, Percocet, Tylox)• Hydromorphone (Dilaudid)• Morphine (MSIR, Roxanol)• Hydromorphone (Dilaudid)

Page 31: Issues in Pain Management:

Medications: Opiates• Chronic Opiate Therapy

– Long-acting Agents• Methadone• Morphine SR (MS Contin, Kadian,

Oramorph SR)• Oxycondone SR (Oxycontin)• Fentanyl Patch (Duragesic)• Hydromorphone SR (Dilaudid SR in

future)

Page 32: Issues in Pain Management:

Adjuvant Therapies

• Education

• Weight loss

• Exercise, Yoga

• Heat, cold, elevation, rest

• Massage, TENS

• Physical Therapy – strengthening, mobility, aquatics, low impact

aerobics

Page 33: Issues in Pain Management:

Psychologic Therapy

• Counseling– Pain counseling– Grief, depression– Pacing strategies– Appropriate goal setting

• Self-regulation techniques

– Self-hypnosis– Relaxation training– Biofeedback

Page 34: Issues in Pain Management:

Interventional Techniques• Advantages:

– “One shot”

– Simple

– Low risk

• Disadvantages– Positioning, technical difficulties

– Cost

– Cumulative steroid doses

– Anticoagulation?

Page 35: Issues in Pain Management:

Interventional Techniques

• Trigger Point Injections• Joint Injections (steroid, hyaluronate)• Epidural Steroid Injections

– translaminar vs. transforaminal• Medial Branch Nerve Blocks, Denervation• Implantable Spinal Cord Stims, Intrathecal

Pumps• Intradiscal Electrothermal Therapy (IDET)• Vertebroplasty

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Sacroiliac Joint Injection

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SNRB L1, Epidurogram

Page 39: Issues in Pain Management:

SNRB L1, Lateral View

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Selective Nerve Root Block: AP View

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SNRB: Lateral View

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S1 Selective Transforaminal Block

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Epidural Steroid Injection

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Epidural Steroid Injection

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ESI: Lateral View

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Medial Branch Nerve Block

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Medial Branch Nerve Block

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Medial Branch N Blocks, Oblique

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Medial Branch N Block, AP

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Implantable Therapies

• Spinal Cord Stimulator– Fairly focal pain, eg. Single extremity

radiculopathy, ischemia, neuropathic or sympathetically-maintained pain

• Intrathecal Pump– Refractory pain or intolerance to adequate

dosage of medications– longevity > 3-6 months– opiates, local anesthetic, baclofen, clonidine

Page 53: Issues in Pain Management:

When and Whom to Refer

• Possible procedural answer• NSAIDs, PT, low dose opiates,• Intolerance of multiple medications• Not responding to simple interventions• Significant psycho-social issues impeding function• Concerns with polypharmacy, possible abuse issues• You want another opinion, you’re uncomfortable • Patient wants another opinion

Page 54: Issues in Pain Management:

Osteoarthritis: Case Report• 82 yo female referred for implantation of intrathecal

pump for refractory LBP

• Xrays: severe DJD, stenosis

• Pt (and husband) reports worst time is sleeping. Inspite of PE, films, feels she functions just fine during the day.

– On Coumadin, Cox II agents -> inadequate relief.

– Percocet qhs only lasts 2 hours

– Recommendations: Methadone 5 mg. PO qhs with acetaminophen, PRN

• Result: Both she and her husband slept much better, both satisfied with regimen.

Page 55: Issues in Pain Management:

Arthritis: Case Report• 78 yo male with long hx steroid dependent RA,

with osteoporosis, compression fractures, degenerative disc disease and facet arthropathy.

• Presents with acute compression fracture T12, bilat. T 12 radiculopathy, secondary muscle spasm and marked LBP due to facet arthropathy.

• Effectively bedridden. History complicated by severe peripheral neuropathy, problems with ataxia and frequent falls. Also has PHN R flank, low abdomen.

Page 56: Issues in Pain Management:

Arthritis: Case Report, cont.

• Amitriptyline 10 qhs--good pain relief, sleep; increased falls

• Oxycodone--constipation, sedation• Methadone--good pain relief but severe

constipation, lethargy• Low dose gabapentin caused increased ataxia,

falls, confusion • Ultram was actually tolerated well with partial

relief.

Page 57: Issues in Pain Management:

Arthritis: Case Report, Interventions• Vertebroplasty of T12 gave some relief of back

pain, but patient fell several days later, which led to vertebroplasty at T11

• Bilateral T12 SNRBs done x2 with steroid for persistent radicular pain with some improvement

• Lumbar diagnositic facets gave good temporary relief so did radiofrequency ablation of medial branch nerves

• Trigger point injections in paraspinous muscles gave excellent relief

Page 58: Issues in Pain Management:

Arthritis: Case Report, Conclusion

• Lidoderm to flank/abdomen for PHN• Physical therapy improved mobility, endurance.

– Pt given walker for stability– Home exercise program, +/- compliance– TENS for myofascial component added

• Pain, sleep improved. Back at work. Falls improved with elimination of multiple medication.

• Effexor added recently for further mood modulation.• Recommended counseling re. Grief, loss of previous level

of function. Declined by patient.

Page 59: Issues in Pain Management:

Adjuvant Medications/Treatments

• Glucosamine/Chondroitin

• Hyaluronate preparations (Synvisc)

• Iontophoresis

• TENS

• Orthotic devices