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American Journal of Pain Management Vol. 7 No. 2 April 1997
Emerging Technologies: Preliminary Findings
DECOMPRESSION, REDUCTION, AND STABILIZATION OF THE LUMBAR SPINE:
A COST-EFFECTIVE TREATMENT FOR LUMBOSACRAL PAIN
C. Norman Shealy, MD, PhD, and Vera Borgmeyer, RN, MA
C. Norman Shealy MD, PhD, is Director of The Shealy Institute
for Comprehensive Health Care and Clinical Research and Professor Of Psychology
at the Forest Institute of Professional Psychology. Vera Borgmeyer is Research Coordinator
at the Shealy Institute for Comprehensive Health Care and Clinical Research. Address
reprint requests to: Dr. C. Norman Shealy, The Shealy Institute for Comprehensive
Health Care and Clinical Research , 1328 East Evergreen Street, Springfield, MO
65803.
INTRODUCTION
Pain in the lumbosacral spine is the most common of all pain
complaints. It causes loss of work and is the single most common cause of disability
in persons under 45 years of age (1). Back pain is the most dollar-costly industrial
problem (2). Pain clinics originated over 30 years ago, in large part, because of
the numbers of chronic back pain patients. Interestingly, despite patients' reporting
good results using "upside-down gravity boots," and commenting on how good stretching
made them feel, traction as a primary treatment has been overlooked while very expensive
and invasive treatments have dominated the management of low back pain. Managed
care is now recognizing the lack of sufficient benefit-cost ratio associated with
these ineffective treatments to stop the continued need for pain-mitigating services.
We felt that by improving the "traction-like" method, pain relief would be achieved
quickly and less costly.
Although pelvic traction has been used to treat patients with
low back pain for hundreds of years, most neurosurgeons and orthopedists have not
been enthusiastic about it secondary to concerns over inconsistent results and cumbersome
equipment. Indeed, simple traction itself has not been highly effective, therefore,
almost no pain clinics even include traction as part of their approach. A few authors,
however, have reported varying techniques which widen disc spaces, decompress the
discs, unload the vertebrae, reduce disc protrusion, reduce muscle spasm, separate
vertebrae, and/or lengthen and stabilize the spine (3-12).
Over the past 25 years, we have treated thousands of chronic
back pain patients who have not responded to conventional therapy. Our most successful
approach has required treatment for 10-15 days, 8 hours a day, involving physicians,
physical therapists, nurses, psychologists, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulator
(TENS) specialists, and massage therapists in a multidisciplinary approach which
has resulted in 70% of these patients improving 50-100%. Our program has been recognized
as one of the most cost-effective pain programs in the US (I 3). The average cost
of the successful pain treatment has been cited as less than half the national average
(13).
Our protocol combined traditional, labor-intensive physical
therapy techniques to produce mobilization of the spinal segments. This, combined
with stabilization, helped promote healing. In addition we used biofeedback, TENS,
and education to reinforce the healing processes. We wanted to produce a simpler
and more cost-effective protocol that could be consistently reproduced. The biofeedback
and education could be easily replicated. The problem was producing spinal mobilization
to the degree that we could decompress a herniated nucleus and relieve pain. Stabilization
would come after pain relief.
The DRS System was developed specifically to mobilize and distract
isolated lumbar segments. Using a specific combination of lumbar positioning and
varying the degree and intensity of force, we produced distraction and decompression.
With fluoroscopy, we documented a 7-mm distraction at 30 degrees to L5 with several
patients. In fact, we observed distraction at different spinal levels by altering
the position and degree of force.
We set out to evaluate the DRS system with outpatient protocols
compared to traditional therapy for both ruptured lumbar discs and chronic facet
arthroses.
Subjects. Thirty-nine patients were enrolled in this study.
There were 27 men and 12 women, ranging in age from 31 to 63. Twenty-three had ruptured
discs diagnosed by MRI. Of these, all but four had significant sciatic radiation,
with mild to moderate L5 or S1 hyperalgesic. All had symptoms of less than one year.
The facet arthrosis patients also underwent MRI evaluations
to rule-out ruptured discs or other major pathologies. They had experienced back
pain from one to 20 years. Six had mild to moderate sciatic pain with significant
limitations of mobility.
METHODOLOGY
Patients were blinded to treatment and were randomly assigned
to traction or decompression tables. Traction patients were treated on a standard
mechanical traction table with application of traction weights averaging one-half
body weight plus 10 pounds, with traction applied 60-seconds-on and 60-seconds off,
for 30 minutes daily for 20 treatments. Following the traction, Polar Powder ice
packs and electric stimulation were applied to the back for 30 minutes to relieve
swelling and spasm, and patients were then instructed in use of a standard TENS
use to be employed at home continuously when not sleeping. After two weeks, the
patients received a total of three sessions with an exercise specialist for instruction
in and supervision of a limbering/strengthening exercise program. They were re-evaluated
at five to eight weeks after entering the program.
Decompression patients received treatment on the DRS System,
designed to accomplish optimal decompression of the lumbar spine. Using the same
30 minute treatment interval, the patients were given the same force of one-half
the body weight plus 10, but the degree of application was altered by up to 30 degrees.
The effect was to produce a direct distraction at the spinal segment with minimal
discomfort to the patient.
Eighty-six percent of ruptured intervertebral disc (RID) patients
achieved "good" (50-89% improvement) to "excellent" (90-100% improvement) results
with decompression. Sciatica and back pain were relieved. Only 55% of the RID patients
achieved "good" improvement with traction, and none excellent."
Of the facet arthrosis patients, 75% obtained "good" to excellent"
results with decompression. Only 50% of these patients achieved "good" to "excellent"
results with traction.
Table 1. Patient assessment of pain relief secondary to decompression
and to traction.
DISCUSSION
Since both traction and decompression patients received similar
treatment (except for the differences in the traction table versus the decompression
table) with similar weights, ice packs, and TENS, the results are quite enlightening.
The decompression system is encouraging and supports the considerable evidence reported
by other investigators stating that decompression, reduction, and stabilization
of the lumbar spine relieves back pain. The computerized DRS System appears to produce
consistent, reproducible, and measurable non-surgical decompression, demonstrated
by radiology.
Of equal importance, the professional staff facilities required,
as well as the time and cost, are all significantly reduced. Since the more complex
treatment program of the last 25 years has already been shown to cost 60% less than
the average pain clinic, the cost of this simpler and more integrated treatment
program should be 80% less than that of most pain clinics-a most attractive solution
to the most costly pain problem in the US. In addition, patients follow a 30-day
protocol that produces pain relief yet allows them to continue daily activities
and not lose workdays.
SUMMARY
We have compared the pain-relieving results of traditional
mechanical traction (14 patients) with a more sophisticated device which decompresses
the lumbar spine, unloading of the facets (25 patients). The decompression system
gave "good" to "excellent" relief in 86% of patients with RID and 75 % of those
with facet arthroses. The traction yielded no "excellent" results in RID and only
50% "good" to "excellent" results in those with facet arthroses. These results are
preliminary in nature. The procedures described have not been subjected to the scrutiny
of review nor scientific controls. These patients will be followed for the next
six months, at which time outcome-based data can be reported. These preliminary
findings are both enlightening and provocative. The DRS system is now being evaluated
as a primary intervention early in the onset of low back pain-especially in workers'
compensation injuries.
REFERENCES
1. Acute low back problems in adults: assessment and treatment.
US Department of Health and Human Services; 1994 Dec; Rockville, MD.
2. Snook, Stover. The costs of back pain in industry. occupational
back pain, State-of-art review. Spine 1987; 2(No. 1): 1-4.
3. Gray FJ, Hoskins MJ. Radiological assessment of effect of
body weight traction on lumbar disk spaces. Medical Journal of Australia 1963;2:953-954.
4. Andersson GB, Gunnar BJ, Schultz, AB, Nachemson AL. Intervertebral
disc pressures during traction. Scandinavian Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine
1968; (9 Supplement): 8891.
5.Neuwirth E, Hilde W, Campbell R. Tables for vertebral elongation
in the treatment of sciatica. Archives of Physical Medicine 1952; 33 (Aug):455-460.
6. Colachis SC Jr, Strohm BR. Effects of intermittent traction
on separation of lumbar vertebrae. Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation
1969; 50 (May):251-258.
7. Gray FJ, Hosking HJ. A radiological assessment of the effect
of body weight traction on the lumbar disc spaces. The Medical Journal of Australia
1963; (Dec 7):953-955.
8. Gupta RC, Ramarao MS. Epidurography in reduction of lumbar
disc prolapse by traction. Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation 1978;
59 (Jul):322-327.
9. Cyriax J. The treatment of lumbar disc lesions. British
Medical Journal 1950; (Dec 23):1434-1438.
10. Lawson GA. Godfrey CM. A report on studies of spinal traction.
Medical Services Journal of Canada, 1958; 14 (Dec):762-77 1.
11. Cyriax JH. Discussions on the treatment of backache by
traction. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine 1955; 48:805-814.
12. Mathews JA. Dynamic discography: a study of lumbar traction.
Annals of Physical Medicine 1968; IX (No.7):265279.
13. Managed Care Organization Newsletter (American Academy
of Pain Management). July 1996.
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Dr. Banasiak
Mark S. Banasiak, D.C., has been in practice since 1994. His primary
objective is to help patients achieve optimum health with natural methods.
Methods that include Chiropractic, Spinal Decompression, Nutrition and Exercise,
and Massage. Dr. Mark graduated from Parker College of Chiropractic, one of
Chiropractic's premier colleges, in 1994. Since that time, Dr. Mark has accumulated
100's of hours each year (well above the California Board standard of 12 hours)
pursuing avenues to help his patients. Attending Seminars/Symposiums that
cover topics such as:
- Nutritional therapy
- Active Release Techniques certifications
- Spinal Decompression Therapy
- Cold Laser (low level laser therapy)
- Frequency Specific Microcurrent
- Motor Vehicle Injury
- Spinal Adjusting Techniques
Dr. Mark believes that each patient has their own set of health issues and spinal
dysfunctions that need to be treated in a unique manner, specifically for the patient.
Most of all, "It Shouldn't Hurt To Be Alive."
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