• Pain Med · Jun 2013

    Review

    Lumbar discogenic pain: state-of-the-art review.

    • Nikolai Bogduk, Charles Aprill, and Richard Derby.
    • University of Newcastle, Newcastle Bone and Joint Institute, Royal Newcastle Centre, Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. nbogduk@bigpond.net.au
    • Pain Med. 2013 Jun 1; 14 (6): 813-36.

    ObjectiveTo test the null hypotheses that: lumbar intervertebral discs cannot be a source of pain; discs are not a source of pain; painful lumbar discs cannot be diagnosed; and there is no pathology that causes discogenic pain.MethodsPhilosophical essay and discourse with reference to the literature.ResultsAnatomic and physiologic evidence denies the proposition that disc cannot be a source of pain. In patients with back pain, discs can be source of pain. No studies have refuted the ability of disc stimulation to diagnose discogenic pain. Studies warn only that disc stimulation may have a false-positive rate of 10% or less. Internal disc disruption is the leading cause of discogenic pain. Discogenic pain correlates with altered morphology on computerized tomography scan, with changes on magnetic resonance imaging, and with internal biophysical features of the disc. The morphological and biophysical features of discogenic pain have been produced in biomechanics studies and in laboratory animals.ConclusionsAll of the null hypotheses that have been raised against the concept of discogenic pain and its diagnosis have each been refuted by one or more studies. Although studies have raised concerns, none has sustained any null hypothesis. Discogenic pain can occur and can be diagnosed if strict operational criteria are used to reduce the likelihood of false-positive results.Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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