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Plain lumbosacral X-rays for low back pain: Findings correlate with clinical presentation in primary care settings.

BACKGROUND: Low back pain (LBP) is a common disabling condition frequently seen and managed in primary care. LBP is considered to be the most common health problem for which general practitioners order an imaging test.

OBJECTIVE: To correlate radiological findings of plain lumbosacral X-rays with the initial clinical presentation of patients with back pain.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: This is a descriptive cross-sectional retrospective chart review study, conducted for 384 adult patients, with back pain who had plain lumbosacral X-rays, at three primary healthcare centers at King Abdul-Aziz Medical City (KAMC) in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, in the period from 1 Jan 2017 to 31 Dec 2018.

RESULTS: The majority of cases had either normal lumbosacral X-rays (32.8%) or incidental findings that were nonspecific. The most abnormal findings were degenerative changes such as spondylosis (osteophytosis) and narrowing of the intervertebral foraminal space (45.3%). The vast majority of cases of chronic back pain was associated with abnormal findings on a plain lumbosacral X-ray, which constituted most cases with abnormal findings among subjects.

CONCLUSION: Lumbosacral X-ray findings in the vast majority of cases do not correlate with clinical presentation and do not justify routinely ordering imaging studies for nonspecific back pain in a primary care setting.

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