diagnosis of lumbar spinal stenosis
Last edited 10/2020 and last reviewed 10/2020
diagnosis
Diagnosis is usually made from a combination of clinical signs from the history, physical examination, and imaging.
- history
- age
- radiating leg pain that is exacerbated by standing up or walking
- the absence of pain when seated
- the improvement of symptoms when bending forward
- a wide based gait
- physical examination
- balance impairment
- neuromuscular deficits in the lower extremities including decreased strength (weakness), sensory deficits (numbness), and absent or decreased reflexes (Achilles tendon and patellar)
- tests used to assess functional capacity includes:
- treadmill protocols
- the gait loading test
- the self paced walking test
- electrodiagnostics
- methods including electromyography is not used routinely:
- useful
- when clinical picture and imaging results do not match
- in differentiating the condition from diseases with a similar
presentation e.g. - peripheral vascular disease (vascular claudication),
hip osteoarthritis, and spinal cord lesions
- useful
- imaging
- although imaging provides the most definitive diagnostic information, it is not carried out routinely during the initial evaluation.
- usually reserved for diagnostic confirmation and procedure planning for patients considering invasive interventions Â
- MRI
- currently the recommended method for confirming the diagnosis of LSS
- has a sensitivity of 87-96% and specificity of 68-75% for the diagnosis of LSS
- CT
- recommended when MRI is contraindicated or unavailable.
Note
- an estimated 21% of people with anatomic stenosis on MRI are asymptomatic. Hence history and clinical presentation should be considered together with imaging before a diagnosis is made
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