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NUMERICAL RATING SCALE AS A PREDICTOR OF AN UNDERLYING PATHOLOGY IN PEDIATRIC BACK PAIN USING MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGE AS DIAGNOSTIC TOOL

BACKGROUND & OBJECTIVES: Recently, constant and night pain has been discarded as adequate clinical markers to predict the presence of an underlying pathology in pediatric back pain. The pain intensity has been recognized as an important domain in the pain assessment. Numerical Rating Scale (NRS)...

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Autores principales: Lindsay, Eduardo A., Olivella, Gerardo, Rodríguez, Manuel, Burgos-Rossy, Edwin, Torres-Acevedo, Natalia, Ramírez-Roggio, Daniela, Iriarte, Iván, Ramírez, Norman
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8283353/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967121S00043
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author Lindsay, Eduardo A.
Olivella, Gerardo
Rodríguez, Manuel
Burgos-Rossy, Edwin
Torres-Acevedo, Natalia
Ramírez-Roggio, Daniela
Iriarte, Iván
Ramírez, Norman
author_facet Lindsay, Eduardo A.
Olivella, Gerardo
Rodríguez, Manuel
Burgos-Rossy, Edwin
Torres-Acevedo, Natalia
Ramírez-Roggio, Daniela
Iriarte, Iván
Ramírez, Norman
author_sort Lindsay, Eduardo A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND & OBJECTIVES: Recently, constant and night pain has been discarded as adequate clinical markers to predict the presence of an underlying pathology in pediatric back pain. The pain intensity has been recognized as an important domain in the pain assessment. Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) is one of the most common validated tools to assess pediatric pain intensity in children above 8 years of age. The aim of this study is to assess NRS as a predictor of underlying pathologies found by magnetic resonance image (MRI) in pediatric back pain. We hypothesize that a higher NRS score is associated with a high sensitivity, specificity and likelihood ratio to identify the present of organic pathology in pediatric chronic back pain. METHODOLOGY: After obtaining Institutional Review Board approval, a retrospective electronical medical record review was conducted. All pediatric patients who reported back pain lasting > 4 weeks between 2009 to 2018 were enrolled in the study. As per regular protocol, a pediatric orthopedic surgeon evaluated all patients who presented with back pain. After a non-diagnostic history, physical examination and spinal x-ray; spine MRI was order. Pain was graded with the use of NRS from 0 to 10. Patients were divided in two groups: NRS (1-5) & NRS (6-10). Variables such as gender, age, pain frequency, night pain, neurological exam, and the presence of an underlying pathology were compared between both groups. Patients that presented with injury due to trauma, previous diagnosis of back pain or cervical pain were excluded. RESULTS: A total of 467 patients were evaluated in the study. Mean age of subjects was 15 years; 69% being female. An underlying pathology was identified in 131/315 (41.6%) patients with NRS (6-10), and 55/152 (36.2%) patients with NRS (1-5) (P=0.27). Patients with NRS (6-10) had two times more probability of suffering constant pain (P<0.03) and three times more likely of having an abnormal neurological examination (P<0.05). See table 1. CONCLUSION: Evaluation and treatment of children and adolescent with chronic back pain is challenging. Our study shows a strong association between NRS high (6-10) and constant pain and/or abnormal neurological exam. However, the use of NRS of (6-10) was not found as adequate predictor for the presence of an underlying organic pathology in children and adolescent patients. Therefore, physicians should not rely only high NRS score to recommend advance imaging study to assess chronic back pain in children and adolescent patients. SUMMARY:
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spelling pubmed-82833532021-07-30 NUMERICAL RATING SCALE AS A PREDICTOR OF AN UNDERLYING PATHOLOGY IN PEDIATRIC BACK PAIN USING MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGE AS DIAGNOSTIC TOOL Lindsay, Eduardo A. Olivella, Gerardo Rodríguez, Manuel Burgos-Rossy, Edwin Torres-Acevedo, Natalia Ramírez-Roggio, Daniela Iriarte, Iván Ramírez, Norman Orthop J Sports Med Article BACKGROUND & OBJECTIVES: Recently, constant and night pain has been discarded as adequate clinical markers to predict the presence of an underlying pathology in pediatric back pain. The pain intensity has been recognized as an important domain in the pain assessment. Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) is one of the most common validated tools to assess pediatric pain intensity in children above 8 years of age. The aim of this study is to assess NRS as a predictor of underlying pathologies found by magnetic resonance image (MRI) in pediatric back pain. We hypothesize that a higher NRS score is associated with a high sensitivity, specificity and likelihood ratio to identify the present of organic pathology in pediatric chronic back pain. METHODOLOGY: After obtaining Institutional Review Board approval, a retrospective electronical medical record review was conducted. All pediatric patients who reported back pain lasting > 4 weeks between 2009 to 2018 were enrolled in the study. As per regular protocol, a pediatric orthopedic surgeon evaluated all patients who presented with back pain. After a non-diagnostic history, physical examination and spinal x-ray; spine MRI was order. Pain was graded with the use of NRS from 0 to 10. Patients were divided in two groups: NRS (1-5) & NRS (6-10). Variables such as gender, age, pain frequency, night pain, neurological exam, and the presence of an underlying pathology were compared between both groups. Patients that presented with injury due to trauma, previous diagnosis of back pain or cervical pain were excluded. RESULTS: A total of 467 patients were evaluated in the study. Mean age of subjects was 15 years; 69% being female. An underlying pathology was identified in 131/315 (41.6%) patients with NRS (6-10), and 55/152 (36.2%) patients with NRS (1-5) (P=0.27). Patients with NRS (6-10) had two times more probability of suffering constant pain (P<0.03) and three times more likely of having an abnormal neurological examination (P<0.05). See table 1. CONCLUSION: Evaluation and treatment of children and adolescent with chronic back pain is challenging. Our study shows a strong association between NRS high (6-10) and constant pain and/or abnormal neurological exam. However, the use of NRS of (6-10) was not found as adequate predictor for the presence of an underlying organic pathology in children and adolescent patients. Therefore, physicians should not rely only high NRS score to recommend advance imaging study to assess chronic back pain in children and adolescent patients. SUMMARY: SAGE Publications 2021-07-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8283353/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967121S00043 Text en © The Author(s) 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This open-access article is published and distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution - NonCommercial - No Derivatives License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits the noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction of the article in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. You may not alter, transform, or build upon this article without the permission of the Author(s). For article reuse guidelines, please visit SAGE’s website at http://www.sagepub.com/journals-permissions.
spellingShingle Article
Lindsay, Eduardo A.
Olivella, Gerardo
Rodríguez, Manuel
Burgos-Rossy, Edwin
Torres-Acevedo, Natalia
Ramírez-Roggio, Daniela
Iriarte, Iván
Ramírez, Norman
NUMERICAL RATING SCALE AS A PREDICTOR OF AN UNDERLYING PATHOLOGY IN PEDIATRIC BACK PAIN USING MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGE AS DIAGNOSTIC TOOL
title NUMERICAL RATING SCALE AS A PREDICTOR OF AN UNDERLYING PATHOLOGY IN PEDIATRIC BACK PAIN USING MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGE AS DIAGNOSTIC TOOL
title_full NUMERICAL RATING SCALE AS A PREDICTOR OF AN UNDERLYING PATHOLOGY IN PEDIATRIC BACK PAIN USING MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGE AS DIAGNOSTIC TOOL
title_fullStr NUMERICAL RATING SCALE AS A PREDICTOR OF AN UNDERLYING PATHOLOGY IN PEDIATRIC BACK PAIN USING MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGE AS DIAGNOSTIC TOOL
title_full_unstemmed NUMERICAL RATING SCALE AS A PREDICTOR OF AN UNDERLYING PATHOLOGY IN PEDIATRIC BACK PAIN USING MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGE AS DIAGNOSTIC TOOL
title_short NUMERICAL RATING SCALE AS A PREDICTOR OF AN UNDERLYING PATHOLOGY IN PEDIATRIC BACK PAIN USING MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGE AS DIAGNOSTIC TOOL
title_sort numerical rating scale as a predictor of an underlying pathology in pediatric back pain using magnetic resonance image as diagnostic tool
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8283353/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967121S00043
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