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Read more on this topic in the Chronic Pain Health Hub...

What's a herniated disc, pinched nerve, bulging disc...?

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Spinal disc pain terminology varies

There are many different terms used to describe spinal disc pathology and associated pain, such as “herniated disc”, “pinched nerve”, and “bulging disc”, and all are used differently by individual healthcare practitioners. Unfortunately, there is no agreement in the healthcare field as to the precise definition of any of these terms. Often the patient hears his or her diagnosis referred to in different terms by different practitioners and is left wondering if there is any consensus on what is wrong.

Some examples of terms used to describe spinal disc abnormalities include:

Rather than try to reconcile the terminology used to refer to spinal anatomy or conditions, it's generally more useful for patients to gain a clear understanding of the precise medical diagnosis, which identifies the actual source of the patient’s low back pain, leg pain, or other symptoms.

Integrated findings form the medical diagnosis


A physician’s medical diagnosis (also called “clinical diagnosis”) focuses on determining the source of a patient’s pain. For this reason, the medical diagnosis of a patient’s low back pain, leg pain, or other symptoms is based on more than just the findings from a diagnostic test, such as an MRI scan or CT scan. Instead, the spine care professional arrives at a clinical diagnosis of the cause of the patient’s pain by synthesizing findings from a thorough review of the patient’s medical history, a complete physical exam, and, if appropriate, the results of one or more diagnostic tests.

For these reasons, many doctors will refrain from using discography unless necessary. Although the anatomic findings on an imaging study bear certain significance, they are not in and of themselves diagnostic. There can be lesions present on an imaging study that are not symptomatic. And while it may be troubling for a patient to have the knowledge that their disc health is compromised, most people will have some level of disc degeneration by the time they reach 60 years of age. A patient’s physical exam findings and symptoms need to match the anatomic findings to arrive at an accurate medical diagnosis and, more importantly, an effective treatment plan.

Medical diagnosis determines the pain generator


The key factor in the clinical diagnosis is to determine if the patient has a pinched nerve or if the disc space itself is generating the pain. These two common conditions produce a different type of pain.

On Spine-health.com, this type of condition is referred to as a herniated disc.

On Spine-health.com, this type of condition is referred to as a degenerative disc disease.

It should be kept in mind that all the terms – herniated disc, pinched nerve, bulging disc, slipped disc, ruptured disc, etc.– refer to radiographic findings seen on a CT scan or MRI scan (x-rays can indicate disc degeneration but cannot actually image the disc itself). While radiographic findings are important, they are not as meaningful in determining the source of the pain (the clinical diagnosis) as the patient's specific symptoms and the spine specialist's findings on physical exam.

Pinched nerve pain and disc space pain treatments differ


It's critical to accurately diagnose the pain generator, because the type of pain created by the spinal disc dictates the type of treatment, and the treatments for the different diagnoses vary considerably. For example, treating a lumbar herniated disc will not do the patient much good if it is a muscle strain or other soft tissue injury rather than the disc herniation that is the cause of the patient’s pain. This is particularly important for patients who might be considering surgery. Surgical intervention can only treat anatomic anomalies that have been shown to generate pain; surgery is not appropriate in cases where disc degeneration—even severe disc degeneration – may not be the cause of a patient’s pain, or in situations where the patient has chronic pain but the exact source cannot be adequately identified. For more information and treatment options on a pinched nerve that causes radicular pain, see articles on herniated disc or disc herniation (the chosen terminology on Spine-health.com), such as:

For more information and treatment options for depression, disc space pain, and other degenerative disc disease articles, see:

By: Peter F. Ullrich, Jr., MD
October 13, 2000| Next: Chronic Pain Health Hub
(updated January 10, 2007)


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