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SIMPLE PELVIC TRACTION
GIVES INCONSISTENT RELIEF TO HERNIATED LUMBAR DISC SUFFERERS.
EDWARD L. EYERMAN, MDJournal of Neuroimaging June 1998
A new decompression table
system applying fifteen 60 second tractions of just over one half body
weight in twenty one-half hour sessions was reported to give good or
excellent relief of sciatic and back pain in 86% of 14 patients with
herniated discs and 75% of patients with facet joint arthrosis. (Shealy,
C.N.,Borgmeyer, V., AMJ. Pain Management 1997,7:63-65).
Herniated and degenerated
discs can be shown at discography-discomanometry to have elevated
intradiscal pressures made even worse by sitting and standing, thus
preventing proper disc nutrition. Therefore decompressing the over
pressurized disc should allow for healing and repair of disc prolapse,
herniation and annulus tears. Serial MRI of 20 patients treated with the
decompression table shows in our study up to 90% reduction of
subligamentous nucleus herniation in 10 of 14. Some rehydration occurs
detected by T2 and proton density signal increase. Torn annulus repair
is seen in all. Transligamentous ruptures show lesser repair. Facet
arthrosis can be shown to improve chiefly by pain relief. Follow up
studies for permanency or relapses are in progress.
The DRS Mechanical
Decompression Distraction System was described by Shealy and Borgmeyer
(1) to give relief of lumbar herniated disc and facet joint arthrosis
superior by 50% to conventional pelvic traction. Twenty DRS treatments
produced on midsagittal MRI a 50% reduction in one case, and a 7mm
distraction of 1.5 on SI was shown on lateral x-ray. (2) Clinical
improvement in 75 to 85% of subjects was reported. Does clinical
betterment correlate directly to improvement in MRI image and can MRI
shed any light on the mechanism of improvement?
That the abnormal disc
has an elevated pressure can be appreciated at discogram. It is
postulated that this elevated pressure interferes both with diffusion of
nutrients from surrounding vessels into the nucleus and with adequate
patching or repair of the tom annulus. Nachemson's group has emphasized
lowering intradiscal pressure for 30 years. (3) & (4) Neurosurgeons
Rainon and Martin (5) at operation on a similar decompression table
measured in an L45 herniated disc a lowering of intradiscal pressure
from 30 to 50 mm above the normal 90 to 100 mmHg into the negative range
of minus 100 to 150 mmHg during 90 to 95 LB traction. Will such negative
pressures heal the annulus, rehydrate the nucleus?
The aim of the present
study was to do before and after MRI to correlate clinical improvement
with any MM evidence of disc repair in annulus, nucleus, facet joint or
foramen as a result of DRS treatment. A course of 20 DRS Lumbar
De-compression treatments were given in 4 to 5 weeks to 18 patients, and
a double course of 40 in 10 weeks to 2 more. Pull of distraction was
adjusted to one half-body weight plus IO lbs. Each session consisted of
20 repetitions in 30 minutes of full distraction for 60 seconds and 30
seconds of relaxation to 50 lbs. Distraction angle on pelvic harness was
varied from 10% for L5-S I to 20 to 25% for L4-5 herniations and above.
Subjects comprised 12
males and 8 females from age 26 to 74. Radiculopathy in 14 patients was
from herniated discs of varying sizes. (L5-S I level in 6, L4-5 in 6,
and 1 each at L3-4 and L2-3). Radiculopathy without disc herniation was
present in 6 patients from foraminal stenosis facet arthropathy and
lateral spinal stenosis. EMGs confirmed radiculopathy in all. MRI's
before and after were obtained on high and mid field units. Clinical
status was assessed before, during, and after treatment with standard
analog pain rating scale of 0- I0 and a neuro exam.
Range of motion for
spinal mobility (initially impaired in all), myotomal weakness reflex
and dermatomal sensory loss were tested.
A) MRI OUTCOMES
a) Disc Herniation: 10 of
14 improved significantly, some globally, some at least local at the
site of the nerve root compression. Measured improvement in local or
general disc herniation size varied in range of 0% in 2 patients, 20% in
4 patients, 30 to 50% in 4 patients and a remarkable 90 % in 2 patients
who had the number of treatments at 40 sessions in 8 weeks. b) Facet
joint arthropathy and foraminal compression cases showed no demonstrable
change save 2 cases with slight increase in height but not in hydration.
B) CLINICAL OUTCOMES
Irrespective of MRI
status all but 3 patients had very significant pain relief, complete
relief of weakness when present, and of immobility and of all numbness
(save in 1 patient with herniation and 2 with foraminal stenosis without
herniation). With disc herniation, 10 patients of 14 had 10 to 90%
improvement in pain and disability. Two had 40 to 50%, one had only 20%
with foraminal syndrome without herniation, 4 had 70 to 100 %
improvement, one had 40 to 50 %, one with severe spinal stenosis had
only 25% and was sent for surgery. Degree of clinical improvement
roughly followed MRI changes but not totally with full correlation.
Improvement from DRS
treatment clinical outcome of radiculopathy whether from disc herniation
or foraminal syndromes is more impressive than most improvement shown
consistently by MRI, at least with today's techniques and short time of
follow-up. Relief of pain and disability by reduction of disc size is
easy to argue in a small majority of this series. A few patients have
dramatic anatomic improvement. The others with minimal or no significant
MRI improvements are harder to explain. Also, many patients improved
very early in treatment, probably before MRI change could be seen.
Nutrient diffusion
increase and tom annulus healing resulting from lowering intradiscal
pressures are likely causes of clinical improvement when MRI anatomy is
not much altered by distraction. Leaking of important sulfates and
carboxylates from the nucleus and posterior annulus have been shown in
recent studies. (6) and (7) lowering of intradiscal pressure by DRS
treatment likely can start to reverse these processes by allowing
fibroblast repair of the annulus outer layers and some nutrition to the
nucleus. Also penetration of nerves into inner annulus and nucleus of
degenerated prolapsed discs has been recently demonstrated and could
play a role in pain production. (8) Mechanical intradiscal pressure
relief may help this feature as well as giving structural stability.
(1) DRS distraction
treatments afforded good or excellent relief of pain and disability
whether from herniated disc or foraminal or lateral spinal stenosis.
(2) MRI showed imperfect
correlation with degree of clinical improvement but 10 to 90% reduction
in disc herniation size could be seen at least at the critical point of
nerve root impingement in 10 of 14 patients.
(3) Two patients with
extended courses of treatment showed 90% disc reduction and one of these
had early rehydration of the degenerated disc at L4-5. An "empty pouch"
sign on MRI at the site of previous herniation was seen in these 2
patients.
(4) Foraminal and lateral
spinal or facet arthrosis cases causing radiculopathy without herniation
also improved but without MRI change.
(5) Annulus healing or
patching in the herniated disc can be shown by MRI and is postulated to
be a primary factor in clinical and MRI improvement.
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