|
History of Spinal Stenosis
The history is the patients story: how the symptoms began, where
the symptoms are located, what is the interference in the quality of life,
what relieves and what aggravates. Spinal stenosis is the narrowing of
the spinal canal which reduces the space available for the nerves. Spinal
stenosis commonly causes leg pain because stenosis compresses a nerve
that ultimately goes down into the leg. However, the nerve compression
may only cause numbness, or weakness instead of pain or may cause all
or some of those symptoms in a leg. (numbness, weakness, pain). Depending
on whether the stenosis is central or is located on both sides of the
spine, symptoms may be in both legs because the nerves are compressed
where they are grouped together in the middle (central stenosis) or are
concurrently compressed on both sides of the spine (right and left).
Most patients with spinal stenosis will have leg symptoms walking and
standing but not sitting. The spinal canal is dynamically bigger or smaller
depending on the patients posture. If the spine is bent forward,
the spinal canal is bigger and therefore increases the space for the nerves.
If the spine is bent backwards, the spinal canal is smaller front to back
and therefore decreases the space for the nerves. When an individual sits,
the spine is more flexed than when they stand or walk. Many patients with
spinal stenosis will start to bend forward as they walk in an effort to
increase the space in the spinal canal and provide more room for the spinal
nerves. Walking while leaning on a shopping cart often makes patients
with stenosis more comfortable because of the same principle of bending
the spine forward to create room.
Physical Exam of Spinal Stenosis
The physical exam is performed by the doctor to determine the effects
of stenosis. An examination of the function of the nerves in the legs
may reveal weakness, numbness or reflex change. In stenosis, most patients
do not have dramatic physical findings. Occasionally, bending the patient
backwards brings on leg symptoms for the reasons stated above.
Diagnostic Studies for Spinal Stenosis
The purpose of diagnostic studies is to answer the question, where
on the electrical diagram is the interruption that explains the patients
clinical situation. Diagnostic studies are designed to produce a
picture of the interruption (MRI, Myelogram, C.A.T. scan) or to indicate
electrical interference of the nerves. (EMG or SSEP). The diagnostic studies
must correlate with (explain) the patients history and physical
exam to be meaningful. Many tests show age related changes that exist
in people who do not have pain. (there are people who have spinal stenosis
who do not have any symptoms and degenerative changes are common in the
spine as patients mature)
Treatment of Spinal Stenosis
Natural History
The natural history is the rate that nature cures a particular condition.
Nature has been curing things for 3 billion years and a certain percentage
of patients with a particular diagnosis are going to be healed by nature.
For spinal stenosis, nature does a reasonable job. Nerves exposed to very
slow compression can adapt until they are squeezed at a critical limit.
Stenosis symptoms are commonly slow in onset, and gradual in presentation.
A point can be reached where the spinal canal narrows so much, that there
is no space available for the nerves. This is critical narrowing. Critical
narrowing is a concept of lack of space. After all, the nerves occupy
space and need sufficient room.Most patients will have some symptoms when
and if they reach critical narrowing. What if the patients have significant
narrowing? One study followed patients with spinal stenosis for 4 years
without surgery, 70% stayed the same, 15% improved and 15% became worse.
Conservative Care
The purpose of conservative care is to relieve symptoms and improve function.
Conservative treatment does not always cure but often it relieves.
The laundry list of potential treatments for spinal stenosis includes:
physical therapy, chiropractic care, injections, medications, etc.
Surgery
The goal of surgery is to take pressure off the involved nerve or nerves
by removing the anatomy that causes compression. The spinal stenosis causes
leg symptoms, removal of the compression allows the nerve or nerves freedom
and the potential to reverse the injury state caused by compression.
Surgery for spinal stenosis improves specific symptoms in the leg more
than other symptoms. (e.g. surgery is more effective for pain relief than
changing a depressed reflex back to normal).
Different surgical procedures are available which allow access to the
location of stenosis and then decompress the nerves directly. The surgical
strategy involves the technique chosen by the surgeon to accomplish this
goal. Since spinal stenosis surgery involves altering the anatomy to free
the nerve or nerves from compression, clearly understanding what anatomy
needs to be changed is more important than labeling the operation with
a particular title.
Conclusion
Spinal stenosis is narrowing of the spinal canal. The effect of spinal
canal narrowing is to reduce the space available for the nerves. This
reduction in space may lead to nerve compression and therefore symptoms
in the legs. The impact of stenosis on a particular patient can vary from
minimal to severe. The choice of treatment for spinal stenosis involves
the patient determining how the symptoms of spinal stenosis effects the
patients quality of life. The strategy of surgery for spinal stenosis
is to alter the anatomy that causes nerve compression.
|