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Intervertebral Disc Disease

Intervertebral Disc Disease

Intervertebral Disc Disease

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IVD Basics: Anatomy & Degeneration - Spine's Shock Absorbers

Normal vs. Herniated Disc

  • Structure: Spine's shock absorbers, between vertebrae.
    • Annulus Fibrosus (AF): Outer, tough, fibrocartilaginous rings (Type I collagen). Resists tensile stress.
    • Nucleus Pulposus (NP): Inner, gelatinous core (Type II collagen, proteoglycans). Resists compression.
    • Cartilaginous Endplates: Hyaline cartilage; interface with vertebral bodies, nutrient supply.
  • Function: Shock absorption, load distribution, spinal flexibility.
  • Degeneration (Spondylosis): Age-related, starts in NP.
    • NP desiccation (↓ proteoglycans, water content).
    • AF tears (circumferential/radial).
    • Disc height ↓, osteophytes form.

⭐ Most common site for lumbar disc herniation is L4-L5 or L5-S1 due to high biomechanical stress and mobility.

  • Blood supply: Avascular in adults; nutrients by diffusion via endplates. 📌 DAN (Disc Avascular Nutrient-diffusion)

Disc Herniation: Pathophysiology & Types - When Cushions Bulge

Pathophysiology: Degeneration of annulus fibrosus (AF) → tears → nucleus pulposus (NP) herniates → neural compression.

Morphological Types:

  • Bulge: Symmetrical annular extension; NP contained.
  • Protrusion: Focal annular extension; outer AF intact. Base > dome.
  • Extrusion: NP through AF; dome > base (mushroom shape).
  • Sequestration: Free NP fragment, detached.

Anatomical Locations (📌 Mnemonic: Can Policemen Find Everything?):

  • Central: Midline; risk myelopathy/Cauda Equina Syndrome (CES).
  • Paracentral (Posterolateral): Most common. Affects traversing nerve root.
  • Foraminal: Affects exiting nerve root in foramen.
  • Extraforaminal: Affects exiting nerve root lateral to foramen.

⭐ Most common: Posterolateral L4-L5 or L5-S1. An L4-L5 herniation typically compresses the traversing L5 nerve root.

Intervertebral disc herniation types and treatments and anatomical locations (central, paracentral, foraminal, extraforaminal))

Clinical Features: Symptoms & Syndromes - Signals of Distress

  • Pain Patterns:
    • Axial: Localized (neck/back).
    • Radicular: Dermatomal radiation (e.g., sciatica); worse with Valsalva.
  • Neurological Signs:
    • Sensory: Paresthesia, numbness.
    • Motor: Myotomal weakness.
    • Reflexes: ↓ (radiculopathy); ↑/Babinski (myelopathy).
  • Specific Syndromes:
    • Radiculopathy: Nerve root impingement.
      • Cervical: Arm pain/deficits.
      • Lumbar: Leg pain/deficits (e.g., foot drop L5). Positive SLR.
    • Myelopathy: Cord compression.
      • Gait issues, UMN signs (spasticity).
    • ⚠️ Cauda Equina Syndrome (CES):
      • Bilateral sciatica, saddle anesthesia (S2-S5), bowel/bladder dysfunction, ↓ anal tone. Surgical Emergency!
  • Red Flags: ⚠️
    • Age <20 or >55 (new onset).
    • Night pain, fever, weight loss.
    • Progressive neuro deficit, history of cancer.

⭐ Cauda Equina Syndrome (CES) is a critical surgical emergency characterized by bilateral radiculopathy, saddle anesthesia, and sphincter disturbance.

Cauda Equina Syndrome: History and Exam Findings

Diagnosis & Management: Finding & Fixing - Charting the Course

  • Diagnosis:

    • Clinical Exam:
      • History: Radicular pain, numbness, weakness.
      • Tests: SLR (Lasegue's) - lumbar; Spurling's - cervical.
    • Imaging:
      • X-ray: Initial; fracture/instability, disc space.
      • MRI: Details herniation, nerve/cord compression.
      • CT Myelogram: If MRI C/I. Axial MRI L4-5 disc herniation with nerve root impingement
    • EMG/NCS: Confirms radiculopathy, severity.
  • Management:

    • Conservative (Primary):
      • Activity modification, NSAIDs, physiotherapy (McKenzie, core strength).
      • Epidural steroids for severe radicular pain.
    • Surgical Indications:
      • ⚠️ Cauda Equina Syndrome (CES) - EMERGENCY! Immediate decompression.
      • Progressive motor deficit.
      • Intractable pain despite >6-12 weeks conservative care.
    • Surgical Options:
      • Microdiscectomy/Discectomy.
      • Laminectomy/Foraminotomy.
      • Spinal Fusion (instability).

⭐ MRI is the investigation of choice for diagnosing intervertebral disc prolapse and assessing nerve root compression.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Most common lumbar disc prolapse: L4-L5, then L5-S1.
  • Postero-lateral prolapse affects traversing nerve root (e.g., L4-L5 disc → L5 root).
  • SLR test positive indicates sciatic nerve root irritation in lumbar herniation.
  • Cauda Equina Syndrome: Surgical emergency; presents with bilateral sciatica, saddle anesthesia, bowel/bladder dysfunction.
  • MRI is the gold standard imaging for diagnosing intervertebral disc prolapse.
  • Conservative management is first-line for most uncomplicated disc prolapses.

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