Litcius/Paper detail

Pain Management Interventions in Lumbar Spinal Stenosis: A Literature Review

Kashif N Malik, Curren Giberson, Matthew Ballard, Nathan Camp, Justin Chan

2023Cureus14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) occurs due to the narrowing of the space within the vertebral canal and or intervertebral foramina. This results in the compression of the spinal cord and possibly the roots of the spinal nerves. Lower back pain and neurogenic claudication (NC) are major symptoms of spinal stenosis. This is a literature review that summarizes the important findings pertaining to pain management of spinal stenosis. Twenty-four original articles were assessed. Pain can be treated through non-invasive or surgical methods. Conservative techniques include physical exercises, epidural corticosteroid injection, local anesthetic injection therapy, and oral analgesics. Surgical intervention deals with the decompression of the affected spinal region, with or without vertebral fusion surgery. Other novel surgical techniques include implantation of specific equipment, known as interspinous spacer devices and minimally invasive lumbar decompression (MILD). Most studies offering a comparative analysis have demonstrated that surgical intervention is more efficacious than non-surgical interventions to manage pain associated with spinal stenosis.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineLumbar spinal stenosisNeurogenic claudicationSpinal stenosisSpinal canal stenosisDecompressionSpinal canalSurgeryLumbarStenosisBack painEpidural spaceInterventional pain managementLow back painSpinal cordAnesthesiaRadiologyPain managementPsychiatryPathologyAlternative medicineSpine and Intervertebral Disc PathologyMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitationAnesthesia and Pain Management