• Pain physician · Mar 2013

    The influence of pain sensitivity on the symptom severity in patients with lumbar spinal stenosis.

    • Ho-Joong Kim, Bo-Gun Suh, Dong-Bong Lee, Gun-Woo Lee, Dong-Whan Kim, Kyoung-Tak Kang, Bong-Soon Chang, Choon-Ki Lee, and Jin S Yeom.
    • Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Republic of Korea.
    • Pain Physician. 2013 Mar 1;16(2):135-44.

    BackgroundThe symptom severity of back pain/leg pain is not correlated with the severity of degenerative changes and canal stenosis in lumbar stenosis. Considering the individual pain sensitivity might play an important role in pain perception, this discordance between the radiologic findings and clinical symptoms in degenerative lumbar stenosis might originate from the individual difference of pain sensitivity for back pain and/or leg pain.ObjectiveTo determine the relationship among the clinical symptoms, radiologic findings, and the individual pain sensitivity in the patients with degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis.Study DesignRetrospective analysis of prospectively collected data.SettingA spine center in the department of orthopedic surgery.MethodsIn 94 patients who had chronic back pain and/or leg pain caused by degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis, a medical history, a physical examination, and completion of a series of questionnaires, including pain sensitivity questionnaire (PSQ) [total PSQ and PSQ-minor], Oswestry Disability Index (ODI), Visual Analog Pain Scale (VAS) for back pain, and Short Form-36 (SF-36) were recorded on the first visit. Radiologic analysis was performed using the MRI findings. The grading of canal stenosis was based on the method by Schizas, and the degree of disc degeneration was graded from T2-weighted images with the Pfirrmann classification. The correlations among variables were statistically analyzed.ResultsTotal PSQ and PSQ-minor were not dependent on the grade of canal stenosis after gender adjustment. VAS for leg pain and back pain was highly associated with the total PSQ and the PSQ-minor. Total PSQ and PSQ-minor were also significantly associated with ODI. Among SF-36 scales, the PSQ minor had significant correlations with SF-36 such as bodily pain (BP), Role-emotional (RE), and Mental Component Summary (MCS) after control of confounding variables such as body mass index (BMI), age, and the grade of canal stenosis/disc degeneration. Total PSQ was significantly associated with the SF-36 RP, BP, and RE. Furthermore, after adjustment for gender and pain sensitivity, there was no significant association between the grade of canal stenosis and VAS for back pain/leg pain and ODI, and no correlation was found between the grade of disc degeneration and VAS for back pain/leg pain and ODI, either.LimitationsThe multiple lesions of canal stenosis and/or disc degeneration and the grade of facet degeneration were not considered as a variable.ConclusionThe current study suggests that the pain sensitivity could be a determining factor for symptom severity in the degenerative spinal disease.

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