Back Pain:
- Mechanical: Classically worsens with movement, better with rest. Can be referred down to bilateral hips, thighs.
- Patterns:
- Radiculopathy (classically sciatica): pain radiates in dermatome of nerve root impingement. May be associated with neurologic symptoms (weakness or numbness) in the affected area
- Spinal Stenosis: pain radiates to legs. Worse with activity. Predictably improves with leaning forward, rest
- RED FLAGS:
- Night pain
- B-Symptoms (fever, sweats, weight loss)
- Neurological symptoms including numbness, weakness, bladder incontinence (overflow), fecal incontinence (loss of sphincter tone)
- Known history of malignancy
- Patterns:
- Inflammatory: associated with morning stiffness, aggravated by rest, possibly extra-axial symptoms of connective tissue disease.
- Referred pain
In the case today the patient had progressive, severe back pain in the context of 2 months of B-symptoms. He presented with cord compression.
Differential:
- Malignancy:
- Most commonly prostate, breast, lung. Then RCC, lymphoma and myeloma
- Pain (present in 95%) is often the first symptom, usually preceeding neurologic symptoms by several weeks
- Weakness (up to 85%) and sensory losses follow. Can also have bowel/bladder dysfunction and gait ataxia.
- Patients should get steroids (dexamethasone 10mg IV x 1 then 16mg/day in divided doses tapered over 2 weeks), intravenous pamidronate, and either neurosurgery or radiation.
- This trial showed that for metastatic disease in a single area, surgery +RT was superior to RT alone for solid tumors.
- Infection:
- Other:
- Traumatic, vertebral compression fracture
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