Low Back Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison of the Stiffness of the Lumbar Back Muscles Between Low Back Pain and Healthy Controls Using Magnetic Resonance Elastography and Shear Wave Elastography
Chronic low back pain remains a major public health issue. Low back pain is frequently associated with stiffness changes of the lumbar back muscles. The techniques which assess the stiffness of the back muscles are poorly reliable and do not allow the quantification of stiffness changes. Elastography (magnetic resonance imaging and ultrasound) can be used to objectively and non-invasively quantify in vivo tissue elasticity. The aim of the investigator's study is to compare the stiffness in the main lumbar back muscles (i.e. the erector spinae and the multifidus) by using magnetic resonance elastography and shear wave elastography.
"Chronic low back pain (CLBP) is commonly associated with increased trunk stiffness detected
by quick release methods and motion track systems as well as increased back muscles stiffness
identified by manual palpatory procedures or strain elastography. However, these techniques
are qualitative and operator dependent, hence they remain poorly reliable.
Over the last decade, imaging techniques have become very helpful to characterize the
biomechanical properties of tissues in vivo. Today, supersonic shear wave elastography (SWE)
allows real time mapping of the elastic shear modulus. Also, magnetic resonance allows
mapping and quantifying stiffness within a large volume of tissue. Elastography is efficient
in the characterization of passive and active muscle forces, in highlighting the influence of
muscle stiffness on joint stiffness and in showing stiffness changes related to muscle
diseases Imaging plays a key role in the management of CLBP; It allows to reach specific
radiological diagnosis such as tumor, inflammatory, or arthritis. However, in many cases, MRI
did not find a specific cause to low back pain and the low back pain is reported as
"non-specific". Myofascial disorders are also responsible for non-specific CLBP.
The main objective of this study is to compare the shear modulus of the main lumbar back
muscles (erector spinae and multifidus) between patients with low back pain and healthy
controls.
Second objectives are to assess: the relationship between the stiffness of the back muscles
and clinical stiffness, the influence of age and sex on the elasticity of the back muscles,
the relationship between the surface of the paravertebral muscles and the elasticity; the
relationship between the elasticity of the hypaxial muscles (in front of the spine) and the
epaxial muscles (behind the spine =back muscles), the relationship between fatty infiltration
and elasticity of the back muscles, the relationship between inflammation / edema of back
muscles and stiffness of the back muscles, the influence of the muscular stretching on the
elasticity of the paravertebral muscles, the difference of elasticity in the direction of the
muscle fibers (oblique coronal) and perpendicular (axial), the stiffness difference the
between the right and left muscles, the role of different postures on muscle elasticity, the
relationship between the elasticity of the back muscles and the intensity and type of pain,
the relationship between the elasticity of the paravertebral muscles and disco-vertebral and
/ or posterior apophyseal pathology.
The inclusion of 26 patients and 26 controls will demonstrate a difference in mean elasticity
modulus of 1.1 standard deviation (between patients and controls), with 90% and an alpha risk
of 5%.
Patients will undergo an MRI (sagittal Short Inversion Time Inversion Recovery (STIR) and T1,
coronal STIR and axial T1) in the management of low back pain. At the end of their
examination, two elastography-sequences will be performed (axial and coronal plane). After
the MRI, the patient will undergo a shear wave sonoelastography.
Healthy controls will undergo an MRI (sagittal T1 and T2) and two elastography-sequences
(axial and coronal plane). After the MRI, the patient will undergo a an shear wave
sonoelastography .
Healthy controls will be recruited in the hospital and university. Patients will be included
when the appointment for MRI was made. Signed informant consent will be obtained after oral
and written information.
The data manager will be trained to complete the case report form (CRF) and questionnaires;
CRF and questionnaire. The entries that are not done according to procedure will result in
inaccurate research data and inadequate source documentation. All data collected in the CRF
will be scanned in a timely manner, then saved in an Exel folder, and initialized and dated
by the data manager. Scanned data will be saved to the local database and on Universal Serial
Bus (USB) disk. Computers designated for data entry, export and scanning will be password
protected.
Data reported as missing, unavailable, non-reported, uninterpretable, or considered missing
because of data inconsistency or out-of-range results were excluded.
Descriptive and comparative statistics will be done. The shear modulus will be compared
between cases and controls using a Student's test (or Wilcoxon's test). For the secondary
criteria, the comparison between qualitative variables will be made using the Chi² test, the
comparison between a quantitative variable and a qualitative variable with a Student test (or
Wilcoxon) or a one-way analysis of variance ( or Kruskal-Wallis test), the association
between quantitative variables with the calculation of the Pearson (or Spearman) coefficient,
depending on the conditions of application.
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