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Renewed Considerations in the Diagnosis and Treatment of Degenerative Zygapophyseal (Facet) Joint, Primary Discogenic, and Intrinsic Nerve Root Pain Syndromes of the Lower Back and Extremities |
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Neurosurgery Quarterly,
Volume 3,
Issue 1,
1993,
Page 1-39
F. Little,
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摘要:
This article provides a review of a category of degenerative lower back pain syndromes associated often with atypically referred lower extremity pain. These syndromes are not derived from the more commonly considered anatomic and, hence, surgical lesions of the lumbosacral spinal units, such as frank disc herniation, canal or foraminal stenosis, or dynamic instability within the lumbosacral region. All these lesions are associated with compression of nerve root(s) or distal cord, as usually indicated by distinct clinical and radiographic presentations, and are relieved by a variety of surgically decompressive and/or fusion techniques. However, in this article an overview will be presented, and the history, anatomy, diagnosis, and treatment of less typical, often less-considered, pain syndromes will be discussed. These syndromes are derived from other potential loci within the functional spinal unit(s) and require a different approach, and even mind-set, of assessment, localization, diagnosis, and management.
ISSN:1050-6438
出版商:OVID
年代:1993
数据来源: OVID
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2. |
Etiology and Evaluation of the Failed Back Surgery Syndrome |
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Neurosurgery Quarterly,
Volume 3,
Issue 1,
1993,
Page 40-40
Kenneth Follett,
Bret Dirks,
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PDF (1669KB)
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摘要:
The term “failed back surgery syndrome” (FBSS) designates persistent or recurrent complaints of low back and/or leg pain in patients who have undergone operative procedures intended to relieve those complaints. The genesis of FBSS is multifactorial. It commonly occurs as a consequence of improper patient selection, including failure to recognize psychological abnormalities that adversely affect outcomes. It may result from inadequate operations, operative complications, progression of degenerative processes, or onset of new pathology. The temporal relationships between patients' initial operations and recurrence of symptoms provide substantial clues about the etiology of recurrent symptoms. Evaluation should be individualized and is based upon the history and physical examination. Radiographic studies should be performed selectively to confirm a clinical diagnosis. Plain radiographs, CT scanning, discography, and nuclear medicine scans have roles in the evaluation of FBSS patients, but magnetic resonance imaging is usually the imaging modality of choice. Psychologic evaluation is essential in many instances. FBSS patients should not be denied reoperation simply because of previous failure, but reoperation is appropriate only if radiographic studies demonstrate a surgically correctable lesion that unequivocally correlates with the patient's clinical presentation. Physicians should be challenged, not deterred, by the term “failed back surgery syndrome.”
ISSN:1050-6438
出版商:OVID
年代:1993
数据来源: OVID
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