Metabolic changes in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients with lumbar disc herniation or spinal stenosis
- 5 August 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Neuroscience Research
- Vol. 69 (5), 692-695
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jnr.10357
Abstract
Metabolite levels in cerebrospinal fluid from patients with lower back pain and/or sciatica caused by disc herniation or spinal stenosis were compared with levels in pain‐free controls using proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Significant differences for several metabolites were found in patients with pain compared with controls. Most changes were found in the group with disc herniation, including reductions in glucose, alanine, and lactate, suggesting increased aerobic metabolism in this group. There was a significant reduction in the level of glucose in the group with spinal stenosis irrespective of whether the patients were compared with the whole control group (age‐weighted) or with age‐matched controls. Additionally, inositol and creatinine were reduced in patients with disc herniation. Inositol was also significantly reduced in the spinal stenosis group when age matched to controls. Insofar as the levels of pain recorded by the patients with lumbar pathology were similar in the two groups, it seems more likely that the reductions in metabolite levels recorded in the group with disc herniations are related to disc pathology rather than the perception of pain. However, the possibility that pain perception contributes to the metabolic changes cannot be excluded.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Abnormal brain chemistry in chronic back pain: an in vivo proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy studyPain, 2000
- Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy of cerebrospinal fluid in neurodegenerative disease: Indication of glial energy impairment in Huntington chorea, but not Parkinson diseaseJournal of Neuroscience Research, 2000
- LOW BACK PAIN: Current Physiologic ConceptsNeurologic Clinics, 1999
- The Function of Sensory Nerve Fibers in Lumbar RadiculopathySpine, 1998
- Osmotic regulation ofmyo-inositol uptake in primary astrocyte culturesNeurochemical Research, 1994
- High-resolution 1H NMR spectroscopy of cerebrospinal fluid in spinal diseasesNeurosurgical Review, 1993
- Brain metabolites as 1H NMR markers of neuronal and glial disordersNMR in Biomedicine, 1989
- High‐Resolution Proton Magnetic Resonance Analysis of Human Cerebrospinal FluidJournal of Neurochemistry, 1986
- Chemical RadiculitisPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1977
- MEASUREMENT OF PAINThe Lancet, 1974