Pain provocation and disc deterioration by age. A CT/discography study in a low-back pain population

The computed tomography (CT)/discograms and discographic pain provocation reports of 291 clinical patients, 790 discs (mean age, 38; range, 17-79) were collected. The CT/discograms were classified separating anular disruption and degeneration and recording the pain provoked during discography as no...

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Veröffentlicht in:Spine (Philadelphia, Pa. 1976) Pa. 1976), 1989-04, Vol.14 (4), p.420-423
Hauptverfasser: Vanharanta, H, Sachs, B L, Ohnmeiss, D D, Aprill, C, Spivey, M, Guyer, R D, Rashbaum, R F, Hochschuler, S H, Terry, A, Selby, D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The computed tomography (CT)/discograms and discographic pain provocation reports of 291 clinical patients, 790 discs (mean age, 38; range, 17-79) were collected. The CT/discograms were classified separating anular disruption and degeneration and recording the pain provoked during discography as no pain, dissimilar, similar, or exact reproduction of the patient's clinical pain. Nondegenerated discs usually were found to be painless, and deteriorated discs painful. The proportion of severely degenerated but painless discs increased with age, as did the discs producing dissimilar pain. This may help explain the poor correlation of low-back pain with radiographic degenerative changes reported in previous epidemiologic studies.
ISSN:0362-2436
DOI:10.1097/00007632-198904000-00015