lumbar_arthropathy
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Table of Contents
lumbar facet joint degenerative arthropathy
see also:
Introduction
- lumbar facet joint degenerative arthropathy is a common cause of low back pain increasing in prevalence with age
- these joints support 20% of the upper body weight and thus tend to degenerate earlier than other joints leading to chronic low back pain which worsens as you age
- facet joint pain accounts for up to half of all older adult chronic low back pains
Aetiology
- lumbar disc disease - reduction in disc height results in increased weights placed upon the facet joints and increasing wear
- overuse injury - repetitive twisting
- poor posture
- obesity
- in addition the facet joints can be involved in other arthritic conditions such as ankylosing spondylitis (AS), rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, spondyloarthropathies
Clinical features
- midline lumbar back pain which may radiate to buttocks, groin and/or thighs but not below knees (this would suggest sciatica)
- often worse in the morning with morning stiffness or stiffness after rest
- pain usually worse during spinal extension (bending backward) or twisting, and often improves when leaning forward
- may have focal tenderness
- may cause narrowing of neural foramina outlets causing sciatica and may cause spinal stenosis
Diagnosis
- CT scan or MRI
- medial branch block (MBB):
- diagnostic local anaesthetic injection to temporarily block the medial branch nerve may confirm source of pain
Mx
- patient should expect that the pain is likely to gradually get worse over time and the degeneration cannot be reversed with current therapies
- usually conservative
- simple analgesics
- consider neuropathic pain modulators such as tricyclics
- reduce load on facet joints:
- avoid slouching or over-extending the back
- weight reduction if obese
- strengthen core muscles
- posture aids / supportive chairs
- steroid injections may help in short term
- medial branch nerve destruction:
- usually indicated only if MBB provides substantial pain relief
- radiofrequency ablation of nerves may provide “window” of pain relief of 6 to 18 months
- minimally invasive
- the period of relative pain relief should be utilised as a time to build muscle strength to reduce risk of recurrence:
- intensive physical therapy to strengthen muscles - particularly core muscles, hip mobility, and posterior chain strengthening
- low impact exercise such as walking or swimming
- weight loss if abdominal obesity
- cryotherapy to freeze the facet nerves
- chemical neurolysis to destroy the nerves
- surgical
- usually is a last resort
- will result in reduced mobility which may in itself cause ongoing pains
- has mixed results for pure facet joint pain
- may be indicated for those with structural instability or severe deformity
- eg. spinal fusion or laminectomy
lumbar_arthropathy.1781491954.txt.gz · Last modified: 2026/06/15 02:52 by gary1