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Fatty infiltration of the erector spinae at the upper lumbar spine could be a landmark for low back pain.

Murat Şakir EkşiEmel Ece Özcan-Ekşi
Published in: Pain practice : the official journal of World Institute of Pain (2023)
Severe IVDD and Modic changes were more common at lower lumbar levels in patients with LBP. Both asymptomatic subjects and those with LBP had fatty multifidus at lower lumbar levels, whereas those with LBP had fatty infiltration in the erector spinae at upper lumbar levels. We suggest that fatty infiltration could have started in the multifidus. The erector spinae had greater contribution to the lumbar extension compared to the multifidus. Thus, LBP could develop when the quality of the erector spinae at the upper lumbar levels impairs due to fatty infiltration.
Keyphrases
  • ultrasound guided
  • pain management
  • minimally invasive
  • chronic pain
  • fatty acid
  • early onset