ABSTRACT
Background: This review paper outlines recent advances in diagnostic criteria for hypermobility spectrum disorder (HSD) and its association with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS), as well as current literature on the association between joint hypermobility syndrome and lumbar back pain. We outline the optimal multidisciplinary management of lumbar back pain in the context of joint hypermobility syndrome, as well as the indications and possible side effects of surgical management of patients with these conditions.
Several studies have suggested a link between chronic low back pain and hypermobility. HSD has been described as an excessive range of motion in a joint, when accounting for patient demographics. The nomenclature surrounding symptomatic joint hypermobility has varied historically, and various groups, including most notably the international EDS consortium, have introduced new classification schemes to acknowledge the systemic effects of joint hypermobility, which were previously poorly understood.
Methods: Narrative literature review.
Results: Not applicable.
Conclusions: Lower back pain experienced in patients on the HSD-EDS spectrum is multifactorial in origin and should not be considered solely in anatomical terms. Caution has been advised in the surgical management of patients on the HSD-hEDS spectrum, particularly where the subtype is unclear. The vascular type of EDS has a particular propensity for severe bleeding complications. Rates of perioperative complications after lumbar spinal surgery in the hypermobile EDS population have been reported to be up to 50%. When hypermobility and chronic lumbar back pain coexist, we advocate management in a multidisciplinary setting involving physiotherapists, pain physicians, surgeons, and psychologists.
Footnotes
Disclosures and COI: The authors received no funding for this study and report no conflicts of interest.
- This manuscript is generously published free of charge by ISASS, the International Society for the Advancement of Spine Surgery. Copyright © 2021 ISASS