J Korean Radiol Soc.  2004 Nov;51(5):541-547. 10.3348/jkrs.2004.51.5.541.

Internal Disc Derangement in Patients with Low Back Pain: Correlation of MR Imaging and Provocative Discography and CT Discography

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Radiology, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Korea. hwchung@smc.samsung.co.kr
  • 2Department of Radiology, Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Korea.
  • 3Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Seoul Municipal Boramae Hospital, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Korea.
  • 4Department of Diagnostic Radiology, National Health Insurance Corporation Ilsan Hospital, Korea.

Abstract

PURPOSE
The aim of this study was to correlate the MR imaging abnormalities of the lumbar intervertebral discs, with emphasis being placed on the high intensity zone (HIZ) with the use of discography for pain provocation and disc morphologic evaluation of the disc.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Consecutive patients with low back pain unresponsive to conservative treatment, and who were being considered for spinal fusion had MRI performed, and this was followed by lumbar discography. The MR imaging, discography and CT discography (CTD) were evaluated for all of the 19 patients. Forty-three lumbar discs in 19 patients were included in this study. The findings of MR and CTD images were evaluated retrospectively with the professional opinion and agreement of two radiologists. MR images were assessed for the presence or absence of decreased T2-wighted signal intensity, decreased disc height, annular bulging, HIZ on T2-weighted images and disc herniation. The results of pain provocation were graded as 0, nonconcordant pain; 1, definite pain, but only as part of the symptom complex; 2, concordant pain. The morphology of CTD was analyzed for presence or absence of disc degeneration, radial tearing and extravasation of the contrast agent. The presence of radial tearing was defined as contrast extension to the outer third of the annulus. The prevalence of all MR abnormalities was calculated, and the data were compared with disc morphologic characteristics and the pain response on provocative discography. We used the chi-square test to analyze the results.
RESULTS
Grade 1 and 2 discogenic pain was observed in 8 (19%) and 12 disc levels (28%), respectively. All of the seven non-degenerated discs on MR had no pain response. The decreased SI on T2-weighted image, annular bulging and HIZ were significantly correlated with discogenic pain. Extravasation of contrast media had good correlation with annular bulging and disc herniation on MRI. Radial tearing on CT discography correlated significantly with HIZ. The HIZ was detected in 14 levels (32.6%). The HIZ on MRI correlated significantly with the pain provocation and radial tearing noted on the discograms.
CONCLUSION
Several MR imaging findings correlated significantly with the severity of pain provocation to discography. For patients with symptomatic low back pain, the HIZ observed on MR may represent a painful outer annular disruption.

Keyword

Spine, intervertebral disks; Spine, MR; Discography; Computed tomography (CT); Magnetic resonance (MR), comparative studies

MeSH Terms

Extravasation of Diagnostic and Therapeutic Materials
Humans
Intervertebral Disc
Intervertebral Disc Degeneration
Low Back Pain*
Magnetic Resonance Imaging*
Prevalence
Retrospective Studies
Spinal Fusion
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