Archive for January, 2009

Jan 26 2009

Over Treating Chronic Back Pain: A US Healthcare Failure

Reston, VA, January 26, 2009– Richard Deyo MD, the keynote speaker at the American Academy of Orthopaedic Manual Physical Therapists (AAOMPT) National Conference in October 2008, has again published data indicting the US approach to chronic back pain dramatically increases costs without improved outcomes. Deyo and colleagues reported in the January 2009 issue of the Journal of American Board of Family Practice the following staggering statistics:
·    A 629% increase in Medicare expenditures for epidural steroid injections;
·    A 423% increase in expenditures for opioids for back pain;
·    A 307% increase in the number of lumbar magnetic resonance images among Medicare beneficiaries;
·    A 220% increase in spinal fusion surgery rates.
The incidence of chronic and acute Low Back Pain, as documented by office visits, has not changed during the last 12 years. The application of these technologies is not without consequences Deyo et al noted, ‘Innovation has often outpaced clinical science, leaving uncertainty about the efficacy and safety of many common treatments. Complications and even deaths related to pain management are increasing.’ Indeed, the reoperation rates for low back pain have increased, not improved. The authors conclude that the ‘Prescribing yet more imaging, opioids, injections, and operations is not likely to improve outcomes for patients with chronic back pain.’  They note that these approaches often are applying an acute care model to chronic pain and not acknowledging the current evidence that chronic pain requires a different approach and that there are ‘no magic bullets.’  In a “chronic care model” chronic back pain, like diabetes or asthma, ‘is a condition we can treat but rarely cure.’ Deyo et al suggest the solution that  ‘chronic back pain may benefit from sustained commitment from health care providers; involvement of patients as partners in their care; education in self-care strategies; coordination of care; and involvement of community resources to promote exercise, provide social support, and facilitate a return to work.’
Tim Flynn, PT, PhD, president of the AAOMPT states, ‘The manual physical therapist is the health care provider uniquely trained to manage individuals with chronic low back pain.  We utilize low risk, state-of-the-art care incorporating exercise, manual physical therapy, patient education and the application of the biopsychosocial model in managing this chronic condition. The Academy is dedicated to the application of current models for chronic pain management.’ The recent AAOMPT conference in Seattle focused on current theories and practice of chronic pain management with international experts on pain management.

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Jan 14 2009

Unique Skeletal Muscle Design Contributes to Spine Stability

ScienceDaily (Jan. 7, 2009) — The novel design of a deep muscle along the spinal column called the multifidus muscle may in fact be key to spinal support and a healthy back, according to researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine.

Their findings about the potentially important “scaffolding” role of this poorly understood muscle has been published on line in advance of the January issue of the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery.
“The multifidus muscle was formerly thought to be relatively unimportant based on its fairly small size,” said Richard L. Lieber, Ph.D., Professor and Vice Chair of UC San Diego’s Department of Orthopedic Surgery and Director of the National Center for Skeletal Muscle Rehabilitation Research, based at UC San Diego. Lieber is also Senior Research Career Scientist at the Veterans Affairs San Diego Health System. “Our research shows that it’s actually the strongest muscle in the back because of its unique design. It’s like a long, skinny pencil packed with millions of tiny fibers.”

The researchers discovered that the multifidus has a unique packing design consisting of short fibers arranged within rods, and that these fibers are stiffer than any other in the body. Using laser diffraction methods that they developed to measure muscle internal properties during back surgery, they demonstrated that the multifidus’ unique design serves a critical function as a stabilizer of the lumbar spine. These findings could have implications for surgery, according to Steven R. Garfin, M.D., Professor and Chair of UCSD’s Department of Orthopaedic Surgery.

“It is important to identify what each individual muscle does, and this is just a start, showing that the multifidus contributes significantly to spinal stabilization,” said Garfin. “The more we know about what muscles do, the better we can devise therapeutic interventions such as physical therapy to target specific muscles.”

Garfin explained that currently surgery to treat spinal disorders could actually disrupt the multifidus muscle, which could lead to decreased stabilization and lower back pain. Minimally invasive spine surgery techniques strive to minimize surgical trauma to these muscles in order to best preserve their function.

The lower back, or lumbar spine, can be vulnerable to many pain-causing injuries or disorders because the lumbar vertebrae carry the most body weight and are subject to the most force and stress along the spine. Muscular instability is a risk factor in many injuries and consequent chronic lower back pain, according to Lieber. “The multifidus back muscle keeps us vertical and takes pressure off the discs,” said Lieber. “When muscle function is poor due to back problems, support is lost.”

He explained that many muscles get weaker as they are extended. But the researchers discovered that, unlike all other muscles, the multifidus actually becomes stronger as it lengthens, when the spine flexes.
“The length of the sarcomere—the structure within the muscle cell where filaments overlap to produce the movements required for muscle contraction—is shorter in the multifidus than in any other muscle cell,” explained study’s first author Samuel R. Ward, P.T., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Radiology at UC San Diego School of Medicine. “But as it gets longer, for instance as a person leans forward, the multifidus actually strengthens.”

Contributing authors to the study include UCSD researchers Choll W. Kim, M.D., Ph.D., Carolyn M. Eng, B.S., Lionel J. Gottschalk, B.S.; and Akhito Tomiya, M.D., Ph.D. Tohoku University School of Medicine, Sendai, Japan. Research was supported by the Department of Veterans Affairs Rehabilitation, Research and Development; the National Institutes of Health and DePuy Spine of Raynham, MA.
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Adapted from materials provided by University of California – San Diego, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

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A Physical Therapist’s Perspective:

This report should be of interest to any physcial therapist that treats low back conditions because it provides evidence of the role that the multifidus muscle plays in stabilization of the spine. Although, I have issue with the statement that “the multifidus muscle was formerly thought to be realtively unimportant based on it’s fairly small size”. Physical therapy researchers discovered over a decade ago the importance of the multifidus muscle in spine stability and its relation to low back pain. For this reason many physical therapists have advocated the importance of proper rehabilitation following any lumbar spine surgery that disrupts the multifidus muscle.  In addition, much of recurrent and chronic low back pain can be attributed to spinal instability. Thus, there has been much focus in the clinical field of physical therapy to perform exercises that retrain the multifidus in conjuciton with the transverse abdominus and pelvic floor muscles. To read more about the role of motor control exercises for spine related problems read this news release- Report Shows Motor Control Exercises Reduce Persistent Low Back Pain

Tamer S. Issa, PT, DPT, OCS

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