ARTICLE
TITLE

Lumbar spine X-rays for back pain: Still justified as a screening examination in South Africa

SUMMARY

AbstractStandard teaching in the imaging approach to patients with back pain is that plain X-ray should only be obtained after 3 months of conservative treatment and thorough clinical examination and appropriate laboratory investigations. This approach, while appropriate in first-world countries, may lead to conditions such as tuberculosis of the spine being overlooked. An analysis was therefore made of 1 383 patients with complaints of lower back pain who were referred for X-ray of the lumbar spine. In 28 patients active spinal tuberculosis was diagnosed; in 8 of these patients the diagnosis had not been suspected clinically. It is concluded that in South Africa with its unsophisticated patient population and poor facilities, limited X-ray (lateral and AP view) of the lumbar spine is justified in patients presenting with back pain for the first time.

 Articles related

Muhammad Junaid, Ali Afzal, Anisa Kalsoom, Syed Sarmad Bukhari    

Objective: To determine outcome of freehand pedicle screw fixation for dorsal, lumbar and sacral fractures at a tertiary care centre in the developing world.Methods: A retrospective review was performed of 150 consecutive patients who underwent pedicle s... see more


Rudra Prasad Marasini, Pratiksha Gautam, Binod Sherchan, Ganesh Gurung, Bachchu Ram K.C.    

Background and Objective: In this observational study, morphometric data were obtained and analyzed by taking plain x-rays in various age groups to establish the morphometric values in Nepalese population.Methods: All the pedicle dimensions were measured... see more


Saud Al Obaidi,Fadia Mahmoud    

Objective. This study explores the immune responses following 4 weeks of McKenzie lumbar spine exercise in individuals with acute low back pain (ALBP). Patients and methods. Fifteen patients with ALBP and 15 healthy individuals volunteered in this study.... see more


Sameeah Abdulrahman Rashid    

BACKGROUND Incidental findings could be observed in organs close to the spine while reporting lumbosacral spine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). This study aimed to report the prevalence and clinical potential of extraspinal incidental findings in lumbo... see more


Dil Islam Mansur, Subindra Karki, Dilip Kumar Mehta, Pragya Shrestha, Sunima Maskey, Sheprala Shrestha    

Background: Lumbar region is the most vulnerable area for the common symptom of backache. The lumbar part of spinal canal encloses the cauda equina. Narrowing of the canal can be either developmental or acquired. This leads to compression of the cauda eq... see more