4.2 Review

Lumbar spondylosis: clinical presentation and treatment approaches

Journal

CURRENT REVIEWS IN MUSCULOSKELETAL MEDICINE
Volume 2, Issue 2, Pages 94-104

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12178-009-9051-x

Keywords

Low back pain; Spondylosis; Osteophyte; Degenerative disk disease; Intervertebral osteochondrosis

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Low back pain (LBP) affects approximately 60-85% of adults during some point in their lives. Fortunately, for the large majority of individuals, symptoms are mild and transient, with 90% subsiding within 6 weeks. Chronic low back pain, defined as pain symptoms persisting beyond 3 months, affects an estimated 15-45% of the population. For the minority with intractable symptoms, the impact on quality of life and economic implications are considerable. Despite the high prevalence of low back pain within the general population, the diagnostic approach and therapeutic options are diverse and often inconsistent, resulting in rising costs and variability in management throughout the country. In part, this is due to the difficulty establishing a clear etiology for most patients, with known nociceptive pain generators identified throughout the axial spine. Back pain has been termed as an illness in search of a disease.'' Indeed, once red flag'' diagnoses such as cancer and fracture have been ruled out, the differential sources of low back pain remain broad, including the extensive realm of degenerative changes within the axial spine for which radiological evaluation is nonspecific and causal relationships are tentative. We will elaborate on these degenerative processes and their clinical implications. We will further discuss diagnostic approaches and the efficacy of existing treatment options.

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