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Gait analysis does not correlate with clinical and MR imaging parameters in patients with symptomatic lumbar spinal stenosis

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TLDR
MRI findings failed to show a major clinical relevance when evaluating the walking distance in patients with lumbar spinal stenosis and, therefore, should be treated with some caution as a predictor of walking distance.
Abstract
Parameters of MR imaging play a pivotal role in diagnosing lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS), and serve as an important tool in clinical decision-making. Despite the importance of MR imaging, little is known about the correlation between MRI parameters, objective gait analysis, and clinical presentation of patients with lumbar spinal stenosis. Sixty-three patients from our clinic with symptomatic lumbar spinal stenosis leading to neurogenic claudication were included in this study in accordance with clearly defined inclusion and exclusion criteria. Clinical parameters, the depression status (CES-D), the subjective functional back capacity (FFbH-R), and the absolute walking distance (treadmill gait analysis) were quantitatively evaluated in correlation with morphological data from radiographs and MRI scans, in order to determine the coherence of spinal canal narrowing and clinical affliction. Sixty-three consecutive paents with a median age of 68 years and a mean Body Mass Index (BMI) of 28 were included in the study. The mean FFbH-R score displayed a value of 44 percent. The depression status scored an average of 13.6. Objectively measured walking distances showed a mean value of 172 m until patients stopped due to leg pain. A significant difference was found between the objectively measured and the subjectively estimated walking distance. The mean cross-sectional area of the dural tube at L1/2 was 113 mm2, at L2/3 94 mm2, at L3/4 73 mm2, at L4/5 65 mm2, and at L5/S1 93 mm2. The mean overall cross sectional area of the dural tube of all segments did not correlate with the objectively measured walking distance. However, bivariate analysis found that the BMI (tau b = -0.194), functional back capacity (tau b = -0.225), and the cross sectional area of the dural tube at L1/2 (tau b = -0.188) correlated significantly with the objectively measured walking distance. According to the results of this study MRI findings failed to show a major clinical relevance when evaluating the walking distance in patients with lumbar spinal stenosis and, therefore, should be treated with some caution as a predictor of walking distance. In determining the disease pattern of spinal stenosis functional back capacity and BMI might play a more active role than previously thought.

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An evidence-based clinical guideline for the diagnosis and treatment of degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis (update)

TL;DR: A clinical guideline for degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis has been updated using the techniques of evidence-based medicine and using the best available clinical evidence to aid both practitioners and patients involved with the care of this condition.
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Dynamic change of dural sac cross-sectional area in axial loaded magnetic resonance imaging correlates with the severity of clinical symptoms in patients with lumbar spinal canal stenosis.

TL;DR: MRI with axial loading provides more valuable information than the conventional MRI for assessing patients with LSCS, and changes in the DCSA significantly correlated with the severity of symptoms, which conventional MRI could not detect.
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Quantification of walking ability in subjects with neurogenic claudication from lumbar spinal stenosis--a comparative study.

TL;DR: Both MTT and SPWT can quantify walking abilities in NC but neither test demonstrated adequate external responsiveness, and neither test should be considered as a meaningful substitution for disease-specific measures of function.
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Prognostic factors in lumbar spinal stenosis surgery: A prospective study of imaging- and patient-related factors in 109 patients who were operated on by decompression

TL;DR: Several factors predict outcome in spinal stenosis surgery, most importantly duration of symptoms and preoperative function, and some are modifiable and can be targeted.
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Objective measures of functional impairment for degenerative diseases of the lumbar spine: a systematic review of the literature

TL;DR: Clinical studies on patients with lumbar degenerative diseases increasingly employ objective measures of function, which offer high potential for improving the quality of outcome measurement in patient-care and research, and a systematic review of the literature provides an overview on available options.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Abnormal magnetic-resonance scans of the lumbar spine in asymptomatic subjects. A prospective investigation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors performed magnetic resonance imaging on sixty-seven individuals who had never had low-back pain, sciatica, or neurogenic claudication, and found that about one-third of the subjects were found to have a substantial abnormality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chronic pain-associated depression: antecedent or consequence of chronic pain? A review.

TL;DR: Depression is more common in chronic pain patients (CPPs) than in healthy controls as a consequence of the presence of CP and at pain onset, predisposition to depression (the scar hypothesis) may increase the likelihood for the development of depression in some CPPS.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surgery for lumbar spinal stenosis. Attempted meta-analysis of the literature.

TL;DR: A meta-analysis was undertaken to determine the effects of surgery for lumbar spinal stenosis on pain and disability, and few patient characteristics were found to predict outcome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lumbar spinal stenosis: conservative or surgical management?: A prospective 10-year study.

TL;DR: The outcome was most favorable for surgical treatment, and an initial conservative approach seems advisable for many patients because those with an unsatisfactory result can be treated surgically later with a good outcome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surgical and nonsurgical management of lumbar spinal stenosis: Four-year outcomes from the maine lumbar spine study

TL;DR: For the patients with severe lumbar spinal stenosis, surgical treatment was associated with greater improvement in patient-reported outcomes than nonsurgically treated treatment at 4-year evaluation, even after adjustment for differences in baseline characteristics among treatment groups.
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