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The Limitations of Diagnostic Findings

A number of scientific studies have come to my attention recently
that I wanted to share. All of them apply to MRI (magnetic
resonance imaging) and present some interesting points. When
pain or problems occur in our body, the gold standard of testing
is often the MRI. Your physician can only tell so much from
external physical examination and the MRI is typically used for
more in-depth testing. While the results can be illuminating, they
often do not tell the whole story. Let me explain by telling you
about a few of these studies.

Prevalence of annular tears and disc herniations on MR images
of the cervical spine in symptom free volunteers.

"CONCLUSION: Annular tears and focal disk protrusions are
frequently found on MR imaging of the cervical spine, with or
without contrast enhancement, in asymptomatic population."

Magnetic resonance imaging of the lumbar spine in asymptomatic
adults.

"We performed magnetic resonance imaging of the lumbar spine
on 66 asymptomatic subjects and found that 12 (18%) had either
a disc protrusion or herniation. An additional 26 (39%) had a
bulge that was associated with degenerative disc disease. We
also found examples of spinal stenosis, narrowed nerve root
canals, osteophytes, and vertebral body involvement with
multiple myeloma. Degenerative disc disease is a common
finding in asymptomatic adults that increases in frequency with
age. It occurs more frequently in men and usually involves more
than one level. The most common location is L5-S1."

Dead men and radiologists don't lie: a review of cadaveric and
radiological studies of rotator cuff tear prevalence.

"CONCLUSIONS: Rotator cuff tears are frequently
asymptomatic. Tears demonstrated during radiological
investigation of the shoulder may be asymptomatic. It is important
to correlate radiological and clinical findings in the shoulder."

Spinal Stenosis, Back Pain, or No Symptoms at All? A Masked
Study Comparing Radiologic and Electrodiagnostic Diagnoses to
the Clinical Impression

"Conclusions: The impression obtained from an MRI scan does
not determine whether lumbar stenosis is a cause of pain."
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So what can we learn from these studies. Essentially, they are showing that positive MRI
results do not point to the findings as the cause of the pain. They in no way prove that the
MRI results do NOT show a pathology or problem, just that the identified problem may not
be the true cause of the pain. When surgery is the frequent next step from a positive MRI,
these studies should be seriously considered.

Take the first study as an example. The researchers took 30 symptom-free volunteers and
found that the "
prevalence of bulging disk and focal disk protrusions was 73% (22
volunteers) and 50% (15 volunteers), respectively. There was one extrusion (3%). Eleven
volunteers had annular tears at one or more levels (37%) and 94% of the annular tears
enhanced after contrast injection. Asymptomatic medullary compression was found in
four patients (13%)
." So these "abnormal" findings were present in these subjects who had
no history of neck pain. If a person who was experiencing neck pain with possible disc
symptoms went in for an MRI, how can one truly judge, based only on the MRI results, if the
pain is coming from the disc problem, or if it from other sources. Might this account for the
less than stellar results that many of our friends and acquaintances have reported after disc
surgery?

The other three studies give similar findings, in that the MRI alone does not provide a
clear-cut answer to the cause of pain. With information such as this, one can see why
pursuing options besides surgery is a good first choice. There certainly are instances where
surgery is the best and only choice, but without trying options such as Myofascial Release at
the Pain Relief Center, you are left to wonder. Through an innovative evaluation and
treatment method, Myofascial Release at the Pain Relief Center excels at determining
whether soft tissue tightness is a contributing factor to pain.