Patients suffering from lower back pain could get the
same benefits in pain relief and function from nonsurgical
treatment as from back surgery, a new study shows.
Physicians treating patients with back pain may
be able to offer a no-surgery option, as
non-surgical long-term outcomes might be
similar.
(ABCNEWS.com)
Low back pain is one of the most common complaints
doctors hear from their patients, but choosing the best
treatment has long been a mystery. New research in The
Journal of the American Medical Association today suggests
that patients who opt for nonsurgical treatments can get
the same benefits in pain reduction and function in the
long term as those who chose surgery.
"This confirms what we already know about [back pain],"
says Dr. William Richardson, an orthopedic surgeon at Duke
University Medical Center. "Patients get better quicker
with surgery, but long-term results are no different."
"These studies will become the worldwide standard of
care for patients who suffer from herniated discs," says
Dr. Mark Brown, chairman emeritus of the Department of
Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation at the University of Miami
in Florida. "This should eliminate the wide regional
variation in numbers of disc surgeries performed in the
U.S. today."
Options for Back Pain
Up to two-thirds of Americans experience back pain at
some point in their lives, and sciatica can be one of its
most debilitating complications. This condition of the
lower back, characterized by pain and numbness that travel
down the legs, is an extremely common complaint.
To look at whether surgical or nonsurgical treatments
are better for treatment of sciatica, researchers combined
the results of more than 1,200 patients across the country
in the Spine Patient Outcomes Research Trial, or SPORT.
What they found was that while surgery offered quicker
relief of sciatica-related leg pain in the short run, over
time, both surgical and nonsurgical approaches delivered
positive results.
"The issue is when to switch paths and consider
surgery," says Dr. Scott Boden, professor of orthopedic
surgery at the Emory University School of Medicine in
Atlanta, and one of the studies lead investigators.
"So, for surgeons who previously did not believe in
nonoperative treatment, this study should remind them that
it is effective. For surgeons who would routinely wait 12
weeks before considering surgery, this study should suggest
that it is reasonable to offer the patients the option of
surgery after six weeks, and those that choose surgery will
tend to do better than those that choose the 'continue to
wait and see' approach."
"This trial confirms some of the earlier findings,
suggesting results are similar with modern surgical and
nonsurgical treatment techniques," says Dr. Richard Deyo,
another of the study's authors and a professor of medicine
and of health services at the University of Washington
Harborview Medical Center in Seattle. "The results
reinforce that most patients get better with either type of
treatment, but that if symptoms persist for more than six
weeks, surgery appears to offer faster relief."