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J Bone Joint Surg Am · Feb 2007
Comparative StudyElectromyographic and magnetic resonance imaging to predict lumbar stenosis, low-back pain, and no back symptoms.
- Andrew J Haig, Michael E Geisser, Henry C Tong, Karen S J Yamakawa, Douglas J Quint, Julian T Hoff, Anthony Chiodo, Jennifer A Miner, and Vaishali V Phalke.
- University of Michigan Spine Program, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University of Michigan, 325 East Eisenhower Parkway, Ann Arbor, MI 48108, USA. andyhaig@umich.edu
- J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2007 Feb 1;89(2):358-66.
BackgroundMagnetic resonance imaging is commonly used to diagnose lumbar spinal stenosis. Some persons without symptoms have a small lumbar spinal canal. Electrodiagnosis has been used to diagnose spinal stenosis for over sixty years, but we are aware of no masked, controlled trials of the use of electrodiagnosis for that purpose. This study was performed to evaluate the relationships of magnetic resonance imaging measures and electrodiagnostic data with the clinical syndrome of spinal stenosis.MethodsOne hundred and fifty persons between the ages of fifty-five and eighty years old, including asymptomatic volunteers and persons referred for lumbar magnetic resonance imaging, underwent clinical examination, electrodiagnosis, and magnetic resonance imaging. Subjects were excluded if they had neuromuscular disease, sacral cancer, or inadequate test results, which left 126 subjects for the final analysis. The final cohort was divided into three groups--no back pain, mechanical back pain, and clinical spinal stenosis--on the basis of the impression of the examining physician, for whom the results of the magnetic resonance imaging and electrodiagnostic testing were masked. A spine surgeon also reviewed both the imaging and clinical examination data.ResultsThe examining physician's diagnosis of clinical spinal stenosis was significantly related to the neurological findings on examination (p < 0.05) and to the spine surgeon's diagnosis (p < 0.001). The diagnosis of clinical spinal stenosis was also significantly related to the presence of fibrillations on electrodiagnostic testing (p < or = 0.003), the minimum anteroposterior diameter of the spinal canal on the magnetic resonance images (p = 0.016), and the average of the two smallest spinal canal diameters (p = 0.008) on the images. Measurements on magnetic resonance imaging did not differentiate subjects with clinical spinal stenosis from controls better than chance, whereas paraspinal mapping electrodiagnosis scores did.ConclusionsThis prospective, controlled, masked study of electrodiagnosis and magnetic resonance imaging for older subjects showed that imaging does not differentiate symptomatic from asymptomatic persons, whereas electrodiagnosis does. We believe that radiographic findings alone are insufficient to justify treatment for spinal stenosis.
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