Clinical and electrophysiological appraisal of the significance of radicular injury in back pain

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Abstract

Clinical electrophysiological studies were analysed in 60 consecutive patients with back pain with or without other evidence for a radiculopathy. These studies included needle EMG of relevant limb and paraspinal muscles as well as F responses and H reflexes recorded from the soleus muscle. Segmental denervation was found in 29 of the 60 patients. In 57 patients, abnormal slowing of the F response was present in 27, either unilaterally (25) or bilaterally (2). In 18 of 47 patients with H reflex studies, the H reflex was either unilaterally absent (12), asymetrically prolonged (5), or bilaterally prolonged (1). Statistically significant (P<0.05) associations were found between (1) abnormalities of H reflexes and F responses, (2) F response slowing and radicular injury shown by EMG, (3) segmentally consistent radiographic defects and abnormalities of both H reflexes and F responses, and (4) depressed Achilles reflexes as well as sensory loss and abnormal H reflexes. No significant association, however, was present between abnormalities of EMG, F responses, or H reflexes and pain radiation by history or positive straight leg-raising tests. These data suggest that pain in radicular syndromes is related to the functioning of smaller afferent fibres.

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APA

Fisher, M. A., Shivde, A. J., Teixera, C., & Grainer, L. S. (1978). Clinical and electrophysiological appraisal of the significance of radicular injury in back pain. Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, 41(4), 303–306. https://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp.41.4.303

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