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Verfasst von:Tesio, Luigi [VerfasserIn]   i
Titel:Low Back Pain and Sciatica
Titelzusatz:A New Pathogenetic Model and Treatment Principles
Verf.angabe:by Luigi Tesio
Ausgabe:1st ed. 2025.
Verlagsort:Cham
 Cham
Verlag:Springer Nature Switzerland
 Imprint: Springer
E-Jahr:2025
Jahr:2025.
 2025.
Umfang:1 Online-Ressource(XIV, 113 p. 21 illus.)
ISBN:978-3-031-78534-4
Abstract:Part 1 Observing the Patient -- 1 Low Back Pain and Contradictions -- 2 The Flexion-Type Patient: Low Back Pain, Lumbosciatica, Lumbocruralgia -- 3 The Extension-Type Patient: typical clinical picture -- Part 2 The Basis of Sciatic Pain -- 4 Neurology of Sciatic Pain -- 5 The Missing Link: Epidural Venous Stasis -- Part 3 Explaining the Contradictions -- 6 Explaining the (few) different clinical pictures -- 7 Mysteries Explained -- Part 4 An Integrated Pathogenetic Model and Some Special Cases -- 8 The compressive-venous-inflammatory model -- 9 Cases that are compatible with the CoVin model -- 10 Cases at the limit or outside the CoVin model -- Part 5 Macro-Rationale of Non-Surgical Therapy -- 11 Pain therapies: why they are not the first choice -- 12 Therapies with exercise and manual, physical, instrumental, or pharmacological therapies -- 13 Reflections on Conservative Therapy -- Appendix: When things don't add up.
 Chronic benign “back pain “, with or without sciatica, is a descriptive diagnosis hiding the mechanisms leading to this symptom. The literature still refers to it as a “non-specific” disease. Not surprisingly, both conservative and invasive treatments are inconsistent and highly subjective. The book aims to highlight the main pathogenetic mechanisms leading to pain based on a thorough analysis of the lumbar spine anatomy and mechanics (including its vascular content) and a selection of published evidence converging towards an original integrated model. The result is a downgrading of back pain from a “non-specific” disease to a symptom and clarifying the underlying causes. The book presents an original pathogenetic model named CoVIn (Compressive-Venous-Inflammatory). The cornerstones of the model are a) the compression of nerve endings within the narrow spinal canal from disc herniation or arthritic spurs, b) local inflammation caused by discal material and/or local phlebitis and -most importantly- c) venous congestion of the Batson (epidural) plexus. The model explains the diversity of the clinical pictures: e.g., pain at rest vs. pain during spinal loading; pain unrelated to the severity of MRI or CT imaging; changes of pain (spontaneous or caused by treatments) with no changes in imaging, and others. Consistent with the model, a few physiotherapy treatments are proposed to widen the spinal canal and decongest local veins. These are “flexor” lumbar exercises, water exercises, and—first choice—Active Lumbar Traction (former “Autotraction”). Treatments targeting pain become a second-choice approach. Surgery is shown to be rational only after conservative treatments fail. Other rare causes of back pain, unrelated to the CoVin model, are overviewed and discussed. The book will interest Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Physicians, Physiotherapists, Orthopedic and Trauma Surgeons, Neurosurgeons, Rheumatologists, Neurologists, and Family physicians.
DOI:doi:10.1007/978-3-031-78534-4
URL:Resolving-System: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-78534-4
 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-78534-4
Datenträger:Online-Ressource
Sprache:eng
Bibliogr. Hinweis:Erscheint auch als : Druck-Ausgabe
 Erscheint auch als : Druck-Ausgabe
 Erscheint auch als : Druck-Ausgabe
K10plus-PPN:1915222230
 
 
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