Index to Chiropractic Literature
Index to Chiropractic Literature
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Friday, April 19, 2024
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ID 20049
  Title A case study of back pain and renal cell carcinoma [case report]
URL http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/picrender.fcgi?artid=2647104&blobtype=pdf
Journal J Chiropr Med. 2008 Mar;7(1):24-27
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Peer Review Yes
Publication Type Case Report
Abstract/Notes Objective: Renal cell carcinoma accounts for 3% of adult malignancy and 95% of neoplasms arising from the kidney. One third of the patients have metastatic disease at the time of presentation and are asymptomatic with the diagnosis being made incidentally from a radiologic study obtained for other reasons. Typically, skeletal metastases are purely lytic. It is common for cases of back pain to be managed in chiropractic clinics. The diagnosis of metastatic disease is to be considered as a differential, especially in an aging population.

Clinical Features: A 69-year-old man experienced back pain after a twisting movement while working. He presented for chiropractic care 2 weeks later. He had a 10-year history of low back pain and a 2-month history of weakness at the knee. Plain film radiography was assessed as negative for pathology by a medical radiologist and a chiropractic radiologist.

Interventions and Outcomes After 6 visits of care using atlas orthogonal adjusting, the outcome assessment revealed improvement in the pain but a regression in strength of the right quadriceps and peroneus muscles. The patient was referred for a magnetic resonance imaging study, which revealed a mass on the kidney and a large erosive bone lesion of the L4 vertebrae. The diagnosis of renal cell carcinoma was later confirmed.

Conclusion: Progressive muscle weakness is one of the “red flag” signs in a back pain case. Advanced imaging is necessary to detect occult diseases processes such as renal cell carcinoma. The chiropractor's role as primary care clinician includes the process of clinical reasoning and appropriate referral when the clinical picture becomes unclear and/or “red flag” signs appear.

This abstract is reproduced with the permission of the publisher. Free full text is available through PubMed Central; click on the above link.

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