Spinal (Lumbar) Fusion/Lumbar Spinal Stenosis - Pinched Nerves in the Back
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The lumbar spine is a common source of back problems. Your lumbar spine is located in your lower back. The main function of the lumbar spine is to support the weight of your upper body. The joints of the lumbar spine primarily allow you to bend forward or flex and extend or straighten at the waist. You use lumbar flexion when you bend forward to touch your toes. You use lumbar extension when you straighten your back to stand erect after bending forward.
Your spinal column is made of a series of short bones called vertebrae. An opening in the center of each vertebra forms the spinal canal. Your spinal cord and spinal nerves run through the protected canal and send messages between your body and brain.
Spinal Stenosis is a condition in which the spinal canal is narrowed. The narrowed canal causes pressure on the spinal cord and nerves. Spinal Stenosis may or may not produce symptoms. Many cases of Spinal Stenosis can be treated without surgery. However, some individuals experience severe or progressive nerve involvement, loss of function, and pain. Surgical treatment can relieve pressure on the spinal cord or nerves, restore function, and relieve pain.
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Introduction
The lumbar spine is a common source of back problems. Your lumbar spine is located in your lower back. The main function of the lumbar spine is to support the weight of your upper body. The joints of the lumbar spine primarily allow you to bend forward or flex and extend or straighten at the waist. You use lumbar flexion when you bend forward to touch your toes. You use lumbar extension when you straighten your back to stand erect after bending forward.
Your spinal column is made of a series of short bones called vertebrae. An opening in the center of each vertebra forms the spinal canal. Your spinal cord and spinal nerves run through the protected canal and send messages between your body and brain.
Spinal Stenosis is a condition in which the spinal canal is narrowed. The narrowed canal causes pressure on the spinal cord and nerves. Spinal Stenosis may or may not produce symptoms. Many cases of Spinal Stenosis can be treated without surgery. However, some individuals experience severe or progressive nerve involvement, loss of function, and pain. Surgical treatment can relieve pressure on the spinal cord or nerves, restore function, and relieve pain.
Anatomy
There are different areas of the spine, defined by their curvature and function. The lumbar spine is located in your lower back. It forms the curve below your waist. The lumbar spine connects your upper body-- your head, trunk, and arms, to your lower body--your pelvis and legs. Ligaments and muscles connect to your spinal column. They provide back stability and movement.
Five large vertebrae make up the lumbar area of your spine. The back part of the vertebra arches to form the lamina. The lamina creates a roof-like cover over the back opening in each vertebra. The opening in the center of each vertebra forms the spinal canal. Your spinal cord and spinal nerves travel through the protective spinal canal.
Your spinal cord tapers near the first lumbar vertebra and forms a bundle of nerves called the cauda equina. Your spinal cord and spinal nerves at the lumbar spine level send signals for sensation and movement between your brain and leg muscles. The cauda equina is involved with regulating bowel and bladder functions.
There are six intervertebral discs between the vertebrae in your lumbar spine. The discs are made up of strong connective tissue. Their tough outer layer is called the annulus fibrosus. Their gel-like center is called the nucleus pulposus.
The discs and two small spinal facet joints connect one vertebra to the next. The discs and joints allow movement and provide stability. The discs also act as a shock-absorbing cushion to protect the lumbar vertebrae.
Causes
Spinal Stenosis is a condition in which one or more areas of the spine are narrowed. It can involve the spinal canal in the center of the vertebrae and the side openings or the openings between the vertebrae where nerves branch out from. These areas are called foramina. Spinal Stenosis is more common in people over the age of 50. It can occur in younger people that were born with a narrowed spinal canal, a spinal curvature, or experience an injury to the spine. There are many causes of Spinal Stenosis.
Spinal Stenosis is most frequently caused by the gradual degeneration of the spine during the aging process. The intervertebral discs become less fluid-filled and harden with age. They can lose height and bulge into the spinal canal. The spinal fact joints and ligaments can thicken and enlarge, pushing into the spinal canal. Arthritis is the main cause of these structural changes.
Arthritis is a major cause of pain, swelling, and structural changes in the lumbar spine. Arthritis can occur for many reasons, including aging, “wear and tear,” injury, autoimmune disease, and inflammatory disease. There are over 100 different types of arthritis. Osteoarthritis and Rheumatoid Arthritis are types of arthritis that typically develop in the spine.
Osteoarthritis is the most common type of arthritis. It is a chronic and degenerative condition. Osteoarthritis tends to appear as people grow older. It causes cartilage to gradually wear away and an overgrowth of bone to develop. Abnormal bone growths, called spurs or osteophytes can grow into the spinal canal and vertebral joints. The bone spurs can compress the spinal cord and nerves, disrupting their function.
Spondylosis is a condition that can result when Osteoarthritis affects the intervertebral discs and the vertebral facet joints. Spondylosis causes disc degeneration and the overgrowth of bone into the spinal canal or nerve root canals. A condition called Spondylolisthesis causes one vertebra to slip forward on another.
Rheumatoid Arthritis is one of the most serious and disabling types of arthritis. Rheumatoid Arthritis can affect people of all ages, but most frequently occurs in women and those over the age of 30. It is a long-lasting autoimmune disease that causes the synovium, the soft tissues of the vertebral joints, to be inflamed and painful. It also causes joint swelling and deterioration. Rheumatoid Arthritis is not a common cause of Spinal Stenosis in the lumbar spine, although it can disrupt joint functioning.
Spinal tumors are abnormal soft tissue growths. Acquired Spinal Stenosis develops when spinal tumors grow into the spinal canal or cause swelling. A spinal tumor may also cause the vertebrae to shift out of place because of bone loss.
Trauma from motor vehicle crashes or work related injuries can dislocate the spine and the spinal canal. Acquired Spinal Stenosis occurs because the spine is moved out of alignment, causing the spinal canal to narrow. “Burst” fractures from traumatic injury can cause bone fragments to enter the spinal canal and aggravate the spinal cord and spinal nerves.
Paget’s Disease is a chronic bone disorder that frequently develops in the spine. Paget’s Disease causes extreme bone destruction or overgrowth. The affected bone is unable to repair itself normally. Instead, it produces enlarged, abnormal, and fragile bone. As a result of structural problems, the vertebrae shift into the spinal canal space causing Acquired Spinal Stenosis.
Another cause of Acquired Spinal Stenosis is Fluorosis. Fluorosis develops from excess levels of fluoride in the body. This can occur from inhalation of industrial gas or dust contaminated with fluorides, drinking water high in fluoride, or from consuming fluoride insecticides. Fluorosis causes the spinal ligaments to produce calcium deposits and harden. It causes the vertebrae to soften and weaken, leading to Acquired Spinal Stenosis.
Acquired Spinal Stenosis can also develop when a spinal ligament ossifies. Ossification occurs when calcium deposits form on a ligament and turn it into bone. The posterior longitudinal ligament attaches to the spine and can cause stenosis if it ossifies and presses on the nerves in the spinal canal.
Symptoms
Prolonged standing or walking may cause your symptoms to increase. If you bend forward or sit, your symptoms may be relieved. These positions increase the room in the spinal canal and take pressure off of the spinal cord.
If the spinal nerves in the lower end of the lumbar spine are compressed, a condition called Cauda Equina Syndrome may result. Cauda Equina Syndrome can cause you to lose control of your bowel and bladder. Other symptoms include low back pain, leg pain, leg weakness, lower body sensory deficits, and reduced or absent leg reflexes.
Diagnosis
Your doctor can diagnose Spinal Stenosis by performing a physical examination and viewing medical images. Your doctor will ask you about your symptoms and medical history. You will asked to perform simple movements to help your doctor assess your muscle strength, joint motion, and spine stability. Your doctor will order imaging studies to learn more about the location and extent of your spinal canal narrowing and nerve root compression.
Your doctor will order X-rays to see the condition of the vertebrae in your spine and to identify narrowed discs or thickened facet joints. Sometimes doctors inject dye into the spinal column to enhance the X-ray images in a procedure called a myelogram. A myelogram can indicate if there is pressure on your spinal cord or nerves from herniated discs, bone spurs, or tumors. A bone scan may be used to show fractures, tumors, infections, or arthritis. A bone scan requires that you receive a small harmless injection of a radioactive substance several hours before your test. The substance collects in your bones in areas where the bone is breaking down or repairing itself.
Your doctor may also order Computed Tomography (CT) scans or Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scans to get a better view of your spinal structures. CT scans provide a view in layers, like the slices that make up a loaf of bread. The CT scan shows the shape and size of your spinal canal and the structures in and around it. The MRI scan is very sensitive. It provides the most detailed images of the discs, ligaments, spinal cord, nerve roots, or tumors. X-rays, myelograms, bone scans, CT scans, and MRI scans are painless procedures.
Surgery
The most common surgery for Spinal Stenosis is Lumbar Laminectomy, also called Lumbar Decompression Surgery. The goal of this surgery is to relieve pressure on the spinal cord and nerves by enlarging the spinal canal where it has narrowed. To do so, the surgeon removes all or part of the lamina on the effected vertebrae.
You will be sedated for your surgery. During a Laminectomy, the surgeon makes an incision down the middle of the lumbar spine. The surgeon detaches the muscles and tissues along the back of the spine to gain access to the spinal bones. Next, the surgeon removes part or all of the lamina. The surgeon also removes bone spurs, diseased tissue, or the sections of a disc that have extended into the spinal canal.
Sometimes the facet joints on the vertebrae are unstable after the Laminectomy. They may also be enlarged and fragile because of arthritis. In such cases, the surgeon may perform a second surgical procedure called Lumbar Spinal Fusion. The purpose of Lumbar Spinal Fusion is to permanently connect two or more vertebrae to stop movement and relieve pain caused by movement.
Posterior Lumbar Spinal Fusion is the most common type of fusion surgery for the lower back. In this procedure, your surgeon uses bone graft from your pelvis, or from another source, to make the spinal levels heal to each other, forming a single block of bone and eliminating painful motion. Surgical hardware, such as screws and rods secures the vertebrae together and allows the bone grafts to heal, fusing together the vertebrae.
At the close of the Posterior Lumbar Spinal Fusion, a drainage tube may be placed to help remove fluid from the surgical area. The drainage tube is usually kept in place for one to two days. You will most likely wear a rigid brace to support your spine while it heals.
Treatment
Epidural steroid injections may be performed by your doctor or by a pain management specialist. The injections are placed into the space around your spinal cord and nerves. The steroid (a type of cortisone) "leaks" around the nerves to decrease inflammation and irritation. The injections are often given in a series of three-once per week for three weeks. The results of these injections are very variable.
Occupational or physical therapists can help you strengthen your back, stomach, and legs. Persons with weak stomach muscles and spinal degeneration may wear a lumbar brace or corset during activities to provide support. Stretching exercises will help to keep your back flexible. Cardiovascular exercises help to build up your endurance and improve blood circulation to your nerves. This can help to relieve the symptoms of Spinal Stenosis. Your therapist can also recommend durable medical equipment to aid your safety and activity performance. Such devices could include a cane for walking or a shower chair. Physical therapy is also used following surgery for spinal stenosis. See the section on recovery for specifics.
Recovery
Prevention
Your therapists will teach you ways to safely position your body to protect your back during movements. You should use proper body mechanics during all activities. The use of proper body mechanics is important for preventing future injury. Additionally, you should continue to use your durable medical equipment, such as shower chairs or toilet risers, as advised.
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This information is intended for educational and informational purposes only. It should not be used in place of an individual consultation or examination or replace the advice of your health care professional and should not be relied upon to determine diagnosis or course of treatment.
The iHealthSpot patient education library was written collaboratively by the iHealthSpot editorial team which includes Senior Medical Authors Dr. Mary Car-Blanchard, OTD/OTR/L and Valerie K. Clark, and the following editorial advisors: Steve Meadows, MD, Ernie F. Soto, DDS, Ronald J. Glatzer, MD, Jonathan Rosenberg, MD, Christopher M. Nolte, MD, David Applebaum, MD, Jonathan M. Tarrash, MD, and Paula Soto, RN/BSN. This content complies with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information. The library commenced development on September 1, 2005 with the latest update/addition on February 16, 2022. For information on iHealthSpot’s other services including medical website design, visit www.iHealthSpot.com.