Lyceum-Northwestern University College of Medicine Medicine 1 - Clinical Workshop 1 Topic-Back Pain Group-1
Lyceum-Northwestern University College of Medicine Medicine 1 - Clinical Workshop 1 Topic-Back Pain Group-1
Lyceum-Northwestern University College of Medicine Medicine 1 - Clinical Workshop 1 Topic-Back Pain Group-1
COLLEGE OF MEDICINE
MEDICINE 1 – CLINICAL WORKSHOP 1
GROUP-1
Back pain
one of the most common complaints and cause of disability in
people seen in practice.
It can result from injury, activity and some medical conditions.
Demographic Data:
Name: K.B (Kevin Baker is in initials because of confidentiality)
Age: 71 y/o
Gender: Male
Educational Attainment: College Graduate
Nationality: Filipino
Occupation: Retired School Teacher
Marital status: Divorced
Number of Children: One (1)
Vital Signs
Sexual History
The patient is sexually active with his girlfriend. He stated that he slept
with two women over the past year. He uses condom.
Physical Examination
The patient is annoyed when examining his back. He leans back on his
chair. He stated that lying down alleviates the pain. There is a noted spinal
tenderness to palpation over L2-L4.
Extremities
Lasegue sign (Straight leg raise test) is negative.
Neurologic Examination
Spinal disc herniation occurs when the gel-like center o a disc ruptures
through a weak area in the tough outer wall. It is characterized by acute-onset
severe back pain that is often described as stabbing or like an electrical
shock. Impingement of the adjacent nerve roots leads to radiating pain in the
dermatome of the nerve. Based on the radiation of the patient’s pain, his
symptoms are most likely caused by impingement of a spinal nerve root
between L2-L4. Pain often increases with pressure just like in coughing, as
seen in the patient, and decreases when the patient lies down or changes
position. Patients often have a history of less severe chronic back pain. They
also have decreased muscle strength and sensation, decreased deep tendon
reflexes, and a positive straight leg raise test. Although these symptoms are
not present in the patient, his typical pain with radiation into the right thigh still
makes spinal disc herniation the most likely diagnosis. Moreover, the straight
leg test can be negative in elderly patients even if spinal disc herniation is
present.
Vertebral fractures typically present acutely with local pain and spinal
tenderness. It can be caused by trauma (serious accidents or injury),
strenuous lifting in an older or osteoporotic patient, chronic usage of oral
steroids or may occur as a pathologic fracture due to osteoporosis, certain
malignancies and infections. Based on the patient’s history, there was no
trauma occurred, no strenuous activity and no usage of oral steroids.
Therefore, a pathologic fracture is more likely the patient’s case. He is at
increased risk for osteoporosis due to his age, lack of exercise and smoking
habit. Generally, osteoporosis does not become clinically apparent until
fracture occurs. His family history of prostate cancer and smoking history put
him at risk of having prostate cancer and lung cancer that usually metastasize
into the spine. However, there is the absence of other symptoms in order to
consider it as either a prostate or lung cancer such as weight loss, night
sweats, urinary retention, and cough.
Muscle Strain
Muscle strain is the most common cause of lower back pain which typically
presents with acute back pain. In some cases, there might be tenderness to
palpation following an accident or physical exertion. The straight leg test is
usually negative in patients having this. However, the pain usually does not
radiate making it less likely to be the diagnosis. Moreover, muscle strain
typically presents with paravertebral tenderness instead of localized spinal
tenderness.
CaudaEquina Syndrome
Common
Faulty posture
Mechanical pain (muscle/ligamentous strain, sprain)
Trauma/accident
Infective (TB, i.e. Pott’s disease, epidural abscess, brucellosis)
Lumbar spondylosis (degenerative OA)
Spinal dysfunction (intervertebral disc prolapse, i.e. IVDP)
Psychosocial (depression, anxiety, drug seeking behavior)
Referred (lower cervical segments, renal calculi, pyelonephritis)
Pelvis (in women-dysmenorrhea, pelvic inflammatory disease)
Occasional
Infective (osteomyelitis)
Spinal abnormalities (kyphosis, scoliosis, secondary to poliomyelitis,
Scheuermann’s disease)
Vertebral collapse (osteoporosis, osteomalacia)
Referred pain (cardiac –angina, MI; GI – duodenal ulcer, pancreas)
Spondyloarthropathies (ankylosing spondylitis, Reiter’s syndrome)
Malignancies (usually secondaries: from lungs, breast, prostate,
thyroid)
Rare
V. Red Flags
Urinalysis :
Including causes might be shown to preclude UTI and pyelonephritis as alluded
causes entangling low back agony.
Spine X-beam :
Not valuable in mechanical pain. Required if torment is related with warnings
demonstrating increasingly major issues.
INVESTIGATIONS—SPECIFIC
Sr Calcium, Phosphorus, Alk Phosphatase, Corrosive Phosphate:
• Elevated in threat, myeloma, and hard metastasis
• Serum corrosive phosphate is normally raised in prostate carcinoma with bone
secondaries.
Sr Uric Acid:
• Elevated in gout and lymphoma
• Tophaceous gout may impersonate epidural/extra epidural contamination, sore, or
may exist together with other rheumatological issue.
PSA:
• Backache might be an unprecedented introduction of metastasized carcinoma of
the prostate
• Prostate carcinomas with set up harmful potential are bound to be recognized with
PSA edge >4.0 ng/ml.
Plasmoprotein Electrophoresis:
• Useful in the determination of plasma cell neoplasms, for example various
myeloma, and lymphoma.
CXR:
• A singular pneumonic knob or metastatic stores, more often than not from thyroid,
or breast might be a related injury in older with easeless back pain.
US Abdomen:
• Intra-stomach issue, for example, aortic aneurysm, renal, and uterine illness are an
intermittent reason for alluded torment to thoracic or lumbar district which can be
exhibited on US of mid-region and pelvis.
CT Spine:
• CT scan is viewed as the imaging methodology of decision to assess patients for
spinal injury and vertebral breaks.
HRCT Abdomen:
• To affirm stomach US discoveries, and/or for proof of pancreatic, aortic, or pelvic
injuries.
X-ray Spine:
• MRI is noninvasive, does not include radiation, covers an enormous territory of the
spine, and can show changes inside the plate and vertebral body. It has turned into
the imaging methodology of decision in the determination of radiculopathy, spinal
rope abscesses, spinal string tumors, spinal stenosis
Upper GI Endoscopy:
• In patients suspected with GI causes, for example gastric or duodenal ulcer.
CSF Analysis:
• To affirm CNS contaminations—bacterial,tubercular, parasitic, or viral.
Electrodiagnosis:
• Such as NCS, needle EMG inspire potential studies are normally a bit much in an
obvious radiculopathy or in patients with confined mechanical low back side effects.
These examinations are useful in the assessment of patients with appendage
torment in whom the conclusion remains indistinct, for example peroneal neuropathy
versus radiculopathy and engine neuron sickness.
https://www.amboss.com/us/knowledge/Case_9%3A_B
ack_pain
https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1148690-
overview
Diagnosis: A symptom-based Approach in Internal
Medicine by CS Madgaonkar