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I have recently seen a string of patients by a PCP who for all his patients that have Low Back Pain/Radiculopathy orders a CT scan of the L spine after trying some conservative stuff: NDSAID, PT,etc.
I asked him why he does this, as I always thought MRIs were 'better' in picking up disc pathology etc. His response made some sense:
1) CT scans of the L spine are easier to get approved by Insurance companies d/t I believe being cheaper
2) He quoted the Steve Cohen article, about how MRIs of the L spine have minimal value as they minimally chnage management. He does have a point. You can usually see small disc protrusions/bulges on a CT L spine definitely on sagital cuts, harder on Axial. Of course it is nowhere near the clarity of an MRI. Additioanlly, the point he was making was that with a CT scan you will still see all the red flags and things you dont want to miss "cancerous lesions,etc, fx". Additionally if you see something strange, you can always then go ahead an order a MRI.
3) the con to the CT is of course added radiation.
It got me thinking for interventional pain management is a MRI reallly that necessary or can we use hte infor on a CT of the L spine for our purposes (finding levels to do ESIs, facet MBBs). Of course as indicated above we can always get a MRI to rule in certain things (acute vs chronic compr fx).
Food for thought....
I asked him why he does this, as I always thought MRIs were 'better' in picking up disc pathology etc. His response made some sense:
1) CT scans of the L spine are easier to get approved by Insurance companies d/t I believe being cheaper
2) He quoted the Steve Cohen article, about how MRIs of the L spine have minimal value as they minimally chnage management. He does have a point. You can usually see small disc protrusions/bulges on a CT L spine definitely on sagital cuts, harder on Axial. Of course it is nowhere near the clarity of an MRI. Additioanlly, the point he was making was that with a CT scan you will still see all the red flags and things you dont want to miss "cancerous lesions,etc, fx". Additionally if you see something strange, you can always then go ahead an order a MRI.
3) the con to the CT is of course added radiation.
It got me thinking for interventional pain management is a MRI reallly that necessary or can we use hte infor on a CT of the L spine for our purposes (finding levels to do ESIs, facet MBBs). Of course as indicated above we can always get a MRI to rule in certain things (acute vs chronic compr fx).
Food for thought....