Sciatica

Sciatica
sciatic neuritis, sciatic neuralgia, lumbar radiculopathy

Anterior view showing the sciatic nerve going down the right leg
Classification and external resources
Pronunciation /sˈætɪkə/ sy-AT-ik-uh
Specialty Orthopedics, neurology
ICD-10 M54.3-M54.4
ICD-9-CM 724.3
MedlinePlus 000686
eMedicine emerg/303
MeSH D012585

Sciatica is a medical condition characterized by pain going down the leg from the lower back.[1] This pain may go down the back, outside, or front of the leg. Typically, symptoms are only on one side of the body. Certain causes, however, may result in pain on both sides. Lower back pain is sometimes but not always present. Weakness or numbness may occur in various parts of the affected leg and foot.[2]

About 90% of the time sciatica is due to a spinal disc herniation pressing on one of the lumbar or sacral nerve roots.[3] Other problems that may result in sciatica include spondylolisthesis, spinal stenosis, piriformis syndrome, pelvic tumors, and compression by a baby's head during pregnancy. The straight-leg-raising test is often helpful in diagnosis. The test is positive if, when the leg is raised while a person is lying on their back, pain shoots below the knee.[2] In most cases medical imaging is not needed. Exceptions to this are when bowel or bladder function is affected, there is significant loss of feeling or weakness, symptoms are long standing, or there is a concern of a tumor or infection.[4] Conditions that may present similarly are diseases of the hip and early herpes zoster before the rash appears.[2]

Treatment initially is typically with pain medications.[4] It is generally recommended that people continue with activities to the best of their abilities.[2] Often all that is required is time: in about 90% of people the problem goes away in less than six weeks. If the pain is severe and lasts for more than six weeks then surgery may be an option.[4] While surgery often speeds pain improvement, long term benefits are unclear.[2] Surgery may be required if complications occur such as bowel or bladder problems.[4] Many treatments, including steroids, gabapentin, acupuncture, heat or ice, and spinal manipulation, have poor evidence for their use.[2][5]

Depending on how it is defined, 2% to 40% of people have sciatica at some point in time.[3] It is most common during people's 40s and 50s, and men are more frequently affected than women.[2][4] The condition has been known since ancient times.[2] The first known use of the word sciatica dates from 1451.[6]

Definition

The term "sciatica" describes a symptom— pain along the sciatic nerve pathway— rather than a specific condition, illness, or disease. Some use it to mean any pain starting in the lower back and going down the leg. Others use the term more specifically to mean a nerve dysfunction caused by compression of one or more lumbar or sacral nerve roots from a spinal disc herniation. though in this second use it is a diagnosis (i.e., it indicates a cause and effect). Pain typically occurs in the distribution of a dermatome and goes below the knee to the foot. It may be associated with neurological dysfunction, such as weakness.[3] The pain is characteristically of a shooting type, quickly traveling along the course of the nerve.[7]

Causes

Spinal disc herniation

Spinal disc herniation pressing on one of the lumbar or sacral nerve roots is the most frequent cause of sciatica, being present in about 90% of cases.[3]

Sciatica caused by pressure from a disc herniation and swelling of surrounding tissue can spontaneously subside if the tear in the disc heals and the pulposus extrusion and inflammation cease.

Spinal stenosis

Other compressive spinal causes include lumbar spinal stenosis, a condition in which the spinal canal (the spaces the spinal cord runs through) narrows and compresses the spinal cord, cauda equina, or sciatic nerve roots. This narrowing can be caused by bone spurs, spondylolisthesis, inflammation, or a herniated disc, which decreases available space for the spinal cord, thus pinching and irritating nerves from the spinal cord that travel to the sciatic nerves.

Piriformis syndrome

Main article: Piriformis syndrome

Piriformis syndrome is a controversial condition that, depending on the analysis, varies from a "very rare" cause to contributing to up to 8% of low back or buttock pain.[8] In 17% of the population, the sciatic nerve runs through the piriformis muscle rather than beneath it. When the muscle shortens or spasms due to trauma or overuse, it is posited that this causes compression of the sciatic nerve.[8] It has colloquially been referred to as "wallet sciatica" since a wallet carried in a rear hip pocket compresses the buttock muscles and sciatic nerve when the bearer sits down. Piriformis syndrome causes sciatica when the nerve root itself remains normal and no herniation of a spinal disc is apparent. Pain will register from the piriformis muscle down the buttock and leg, but not usually between this muscle and the spine.[9][10]

Pregnancy

Sciatica may also occur during pregnancy as a result of the weight of the fetus pressing on the sciatic nerve during sitting or during leg spasms. While most cases do not directly harm the fetus or the mother, indirect harm may come from the numbing effect on the legs, which can cause loss of balance and falls. There is no standard treatment for pregnancy-induced sciatica.[11]

Other

Sciatica can also be caused by tumors impinging on the spinal cord or the nerve roots.[3] Severe back pain extending to the hips and feet, loss of bladder or bowel control, or muscle weakness may result from spinal tumors or cauda equina syndrome. Trauma to the spine, such as from a car accident, may also lead to sciatica.

Pathophysiology

Sciatica is generally caused by the compression of lumbar nerves L4, or L5 or sacral nerves S1, S2, or S3, or by compression of the sciatic nerve itself. When sciatica is caused by compression of a dorsal nerve root (radix), it is considered a lumbar radiculopathy (or radiculitis when accompanied with an inflammatory response). This can occur as a result of a spinal disk bulge or spinal disc herniation (a herniated intervertebral disc), or from roughening, enlarging, or misalignment (spondylolisthesis) of the vertebrae, or as a result of degenerated discs that can reduce the diameter of the lateral foramen (natural hole) through which nerve roots exit the spine. The intervertebral discs consist of an annulus fibrosus, which forms a ring surrounding the inner nucleus pulposus. When there is a tear in the anulus fibrosus, the nucleus pulposus (pulp) may extrude through the tear and press against spinal nerves within the spinal cord, cauda equina, or exiting nerve roots, causing inflammation, numbness, or excruciating pain. Inflammation of the spinal canal can also spread to adjacent facet joints and cause lower back pain and/or referred pain in the posterior thigh(s). Pseudosciatic pain can also be caused by compression of peripheral sections of the nerve, usually from soft tissue tension in the piriformis or related muscles.

The spinal discs are composed of a tough spongiform ring of cartilage ("anulus fibrosus") with a more malleable center ("nucleus pulposus"). The discs separate the vertebrae, thereby allowing room for the nerve roots to properly exit through the spaces between the vertebrae. The discs cushion the spine from compressive forces, but are weak to pressure applied during rotational movements. That is why a person who bends to one side, at a bad angle to pick something up, may more likely herniate a spinal disc than a person jumping from a ladder and landing on their feet.

Herniation of a disc occurs when the liquid center of the disc bulges outwards, tearing the external ring of fibers, extrudes into the spinal canal, and compresses a nerve root against the lamina or pedicle of a vertebra, thus causing sciatica. This extruded liquid from the "nucleus pulposus" may cause inflammation and swelling of surrounding tissue, which may cause further compression of the nerve root in the confined space in the spinal canal. A herniated disc, however, often causes no pain or discomfort.

Diagnosis

Straight Leg test sometimes used to help diagnose a lumbar herniated disc

Sciatica is typically diagnosed by physical examination, and the history of the symptoms.[3] Generally if a person reports the typical radiating pain in one leg as well as one or more neurological indications of nerve root tension or neurological deficit, sciatica can be diagnosed.[12]

The most applied diagnostic test is the straight leg raise to produce Lasègue's sign, which is considered positive if pain in the distribution of the sciatic nerve is reproduced with between 30 and 70 degrees passive flexion of the straight leg.[13] While this test is positive in about 90% of people with sciatica, approximately 75% of people with a positive test do not have sciatica.[3]

Imaging tests such as computerised tomography or magnetic resonance imaging can help with the diagnosis of lumbar disc herniation.[14] The utility of MR neurography in the diagnoses of piriformis syndrome is controversial.[8]

Management

When the cause of sciatica is lumbar disc herniation, most cases resolve spontaneously over weeks to months.[15] Initially treatment in the first 6–8 weeks should be conservative.[3] There does not appear to be a significant difference in outcomes between advice to stay active and recommendations of bed rest.[16] Similarly, physical therapy (directed exercise) has not been found better than bed rest.[17]

Medication

Medicines are commonly prescribed for the treatment of sciatica, but evidence for pain medication is poor.[18] Specifically, low-quality evidence indicates that NSAIDs do not appear to improve immediate pain and all NSAIDs appear about equivalent.[18][19] Evidence is also lacking in use of opioids and muscle relaxants by usual means.[18] In those with sciatica due to piriformis syndrome, botulinum toxin injections may improve pain and or function.[20] There is little evidence for steroids, either epidural or by pill.[21][22] Low-quality evidence supports the use of gabapentin for acute pain relief in those with chronic sciatica.[18]

Surgery

Surgery for unilateral sciatica involves the removal of part of the disc, which is known as a discectomy. While it results in short term benefits, long term benefits appear to be equivalent to conservative care.[3][23] Treatment of the underlying cause of the compression is needed in cases of epidural abscess, epidural tumors, and cauda equina syndrome.

Alternative medicine

Low to moderate-quality evidence suggests that spinal manipulation is an effective treatment for acute sciatica.[2][24] For chronic sciatica, the evidence is poor.[24] Spinal manipulation has been found generally safe for the treatment of disc-related pain; however, case reports have found an association with cauda equina syndrome[25] and it is contraindicated when there are progressive neurological deficits.[26]

Epidemiology

Depending on how it is defined, 2% to 40% of people have sciatica at some point in time.[3] It is most common during people's 40s and 50s and men are more frequently affected than women.[2][4]

References

  1. "Sciatica". Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Ropper, AH; Zafonte, RD (26 March 2015). "Sciatica.". The New England Journal of Medicine. 372 (13): 1240–8. doi:10.1056/NEJMra1410151. PMID 25806916.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Valat, JP; Genevay, S; Marty, M; Rozenberg, S; Koes, B (April 2010). "Sciatica.". Best practice & research. Clinical rheumatology. 24 (2): 241–52. doi:10.1016/j.berh.2009.11.005. PMID 20227645.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (October 9, 2014). "Slipped disk: Overview". Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  5. Markova, Tsvetio (2007). "Treatment of Acute Sciatica". Am Fam Physician. 75 (1): 99–100.
  6. Simpson, John (2009). Oxford English dictionary (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0199563837.
  7. Bhat, Sriram (2013). SRB's Manual of Surgery. p. 364. ISBN 9789350259443.
  8. 1 2 3 Miller TA, White KP, Ross DC (September 2012). "The diagnosis and management of Piriformis Syndrome: myths and facts". Can J Neurol Sci. 39 (5): 577–83. doi:10.1017/s0317167100015298. PMID 22931697.
  9. Kirschner, Jonathan S.; Foye, Patrick M.; Cole, Jeffrey L. (2009). "Piriformis syndrome, diagnosis and treatment". Muscle & Nerve. 40 (1): 10–18. doi:10.1002/mus.21318. PMID 19466717.
  10. Lewis, A. M.; Layzer, R.; Engstrom, J. W.; Barbaro, N. M.; Chin, C. T. (2006). "Magnetic Resonance Neurography in Extraspinal Sciatica". Archives of Neurology. 63 (10): 1469–1472. doi:10.1001/archneur.63.10.1469. PMID 17030664.
  11. Sciatic nerve compression during pregnancy
  12. Koes, B W; Van Tulder, M W; Peul, W C (2007). "Diagnosis and treatment of sciatica". BMJ. 334 (7607): 1313–1317. doi:10.1136/bmj.39223.428495.BE. PMC 1895638Freely accessible. PMID 17585160.
  13. Speed, C (May 8, 2004). "Low back pain.". BMJ (Clinical research ed.). 328 (7448): 1119–21. doi:10.1136/bmj.328.7448.1119. PMC 406328Freely accessible. PMID 15130982.
  14. Gregory, DS; Seto, CK; Wortley, GC; Shugart, CM (2008). "Acute lumbar disk pain: navigating evaluation and treatment choices". American family physician. 78 (7): 835–42. PMID 18841731.
  15. Casey, E (February 2011). "Natural history of radiculopathy.". Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Clinics of North America. 22 (1): 1–5. doi:10.1016/j.pmr.2010.10.001. PMID 21292142.
  16. Hagen, KB; Hilde, G; Jamtvedt, G; Winnem, M (Oct 18, 2004). "Bed rest for acute low-back pain and sciatica.". Cochrane database of systematic reviews (Online) (4): CD001254. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD001254.pub2. PMID 15495012.
  17. Luijsterburg, Pim A. J.; Verhagen, Arianne P.; Ostelo, Raymond W. J. G.; Os, Ton A. G.; Peul, Wilco C.; Koes, Bart W. (2007). "Effectiveness of conservative treatments for the lumbosacral radicular syndrome: a systematic review". European Spine Journal. 16 (7): 881–899. doi:10.1007/s00586-007-0367-1. PMC 2219647Freely accessible. PMID 17415595.
  18. 1 2 3 4 Pinto, RZ; Maher, CG; Ferreira, ML; Ferreira, PH; Hancock, M; Oliveira, VC; McLachlan, AJ; Koes, B (Feb 13, 2012). "Drugs for relief of pain in patients with sciatica: systematic review and meta-analysis.". BMJ (Clinical research ed.). 344: e497. doi:10.1136/bmj.e497. PMC 3278391Freely accessible. PMID 22331277.
  19. Rasmussen-Barr, Eva; Held, Ulrike; Grooten, Wilhelmus Ja; Roelofs, Pepijn Ddm; Koes, Bart W.; van Tulder, Maurits W.; Wertli, Maria M. (15 October 2016). "Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs for sciatica". The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 10: CD012382. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD012382. ISSN 1469-493X. PMID 27743405.
  20. Waseem, Z; Boulias, C; Gordon, A; Ismail, F; Sheean, G; Furlan, AD (Jan 19, 2011). "Botulinum toxin injections for low-back pain and sciatica.". Cochrane database of systematic reviews (Online) (1): CD008257. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD008257.pub2. PMID 21249702.
  21. Balagué, F.; Piguet, V.; Dudler, J. (2012). "Steroids for LBP - from rationale to inconvenient truth.". Swiss Med Wkly. 142: w13566. doi:10.4414/smw.2012.13566. PMID 22495738.
  22. Chou, R; Hashimoto, R; Friedly, J; Fu, R; Bougatsos, C; Dana, T; Sullivan, SD; Jarvik, J (25 August 2015). "Epidural Corticosteroid Injections for Radiculopathy and Spinal Stenosis: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.". Annals of Internal Medicine. 163: 373–81. doi:10.7326/M15-0934. PMID 26302454.
  23. Bruggeman, AJ; Decker, RC (February 2011). "Surgical treatment and outcomes of lumbar radiculopathy.". Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Clinics of North America. 22 (1): 161–77. doi:10.1016/j.pmr.2010.10.002. PMID 21292152.
  24. 1 2 Leininger, Brent; Bronfort, Gert; Evans, Roni; Reiter, Todd (2011). "Spinal Manipulation or Mobilization for Radiculopathy: A Systematic Review". Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Clinics of North America. 22 (1): 105–125. doi:10.1016/j.pmr.2010.11.002. PMID 21292148.
  25. Tamburrelli, FC; Genitiempo, M; Logroscino, CA (May 2011). "Cauda equina syndrome and spine manipulation: case report and review of the literature.". European Spine Journal. 20 Suppl 1: S128–31. doi:10.1007/s00586-011-1745-2. PMC 3087049Freely accessible. PMID 21404036.
  26. WHO guidelines on basic training and safety in chiropractic. "2.1 Absolute contraindications to spinal manipulative therapy", p. 21. WHO
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