Techniques in Vascular & Interventional Radiology
Volume 12, Issue 1 , Pages 33-43, March 2009

Interventional Assessment of the Lumbar Disk: Provocation Lumbar Diskography and Functional Anesthetic Diskography

  • Walter S. Bartynski, MD

      Affiliations

    • Department of Radiology, Division of Neuroradiology, Presbyterian University Hospital, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA
    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress reprint requests to Walter S. Bartynski, MD, Department of Radiology, Division of Neuroradiology, Presbyterian University Hospital, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, 200 Lothrop Street, D132, Pittsburgh, PA 15213
  • ,
  • A. Orlando Ortiz, MD, MBA

      Affiliations

    • Department of Radiology, Winthrop-University Hospital, Stony Brook University School of Medicine, Mineola, NY

The diagnosis of diskogenic low back pain (LBP) can be elusive. Physical examination of the lumbar disk is limited and imaging offers few objective clues. While invasive, lumbar diskography is a method available to examine or “provoke” the disk directly and determine if LBP is coming from a disk and which disk(s) is responsible for the pain. Once identified, features of the abnormal disk can be evaluated, including the disk's response to intradiskal local anesthetic and disk architecture as observed on diskography imaging and postdiskogram computed tomography. Response to anesthetic can be correlated with imaging features potentially impacting treatment but can also stand alone as an independent objective marker of diskogenic LBP. Here we review the indications for lumbar diskography and the basic lumbar diskogram procedure. We also review the alternative more advanced technique for studying the anesthetic and mechanical features of the disk, functional anesthetic diskography.

Keywords: low back pain, diskography, anesthetic diskography, lumbar spine

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PII: S1089-2516(09)00020-1

doi:10.1053/j.tvir.2009.06.003

Techniques in Vascular & Interventional Radiology
Volume 12, Issue 1 , Pages 33-43, March 2009