📘 Tom Jesson Profile picture
Oct 12, 2023 24 tweets 8 min read Read on X
If you want to start a fight in a bar full of physios, mention piriformis syndrome.

'Piriformis syndrome' is practically a household name now, and yet plenty of clinicians will tell you it doesn't even exist.

What's going on?
🧵 Image
Well, the first thing to know is it's changed it's name!

It's called 'deep gluteal syndrome' now...
After all, the piriformis is only really one of many structures in the bum that could entrap the sciatic nerve...

There are also the gluteal muscles, vascular abnormalities, space occupying lesions, fibrous bands, and all those little hip muscles

(Pic from Martin et al., 2015) Image
In any case, the idea behind the diagnosis is the same: deep gluteal syndrome is when something bad happens in the bum that traps the sciatic nerve. Image
So yes, it could be piriformis 'tightness' but it also could be fibrous bands, like the ones in these pictures. (Caro et al., 2016)
Image
Image
What does DGS look like? According to a systematic review, it's:

- Buttock pain
- Tenderness on deep palpation of the buttock
- Aggravation of pain on prolonged sitting
- Positive passive stretching or resisted contraction tests

Which also sounds a lot like a description of... Image
Lumbar nerve root pain!

Non-severe nerve root pain often looks like what people think piriformis syndrome looks like.
Let me explain by starting in the neck. It's well known that cervical pain, especially cervical nerve root pain, often causes pain in the scapula that can then travel down.

We don't think that just because pain starts in the shoulder, the person has 'deep rhomboid syndrome'.

Image
Image
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Yes, there's thoracic outlet syndrome, but we accept that this is very rare, and most 'nervey shoulder stuff' is probably coming from the spine and nerve roots.
You can see where I'm going with this - I think that when someone has buttock pain, especially if it's 'nervey' or radiating down the leg, the most likely culprit is the spine, not the pirformis or the deep gluteal muscles. Image
For example, here's what happens if you stimulate injured lumbar nerve roots: buttock pain!

(Quotes are from Smyth and Wright, '58) Image
In another similar study - spinal stimulation in awake, symptomatic patients - Kuslich found that buttock pain was caused by "the application of pressure on the nerve root and outer annulus simultaneously". Image
More evidence that buttock = ?root.

This study found that of 286 patients with a disc herniation, 168 had buttock pain.

(Almost all of those 168 had a herniation at L4/5, so perhaps that is the level that most frequently refers pain to the buttock.) Image
But that only accounts for the pain. As we saw earlier, deep gluteal syndrome supposedly also has other symptoms.

But I think these too are also pretty much expected with nerve root pain! Image
'Tenderness on deep palpation of the buttock' has long been recognised as a symptom of nerve root pain!

From 1943: "in many cases, tenderness along the course of the sciatic nerve is present. It is frequently most severe over some area such as the buttock..." Image
From 1948:

"In a few of our cases of [nerve root pain] tender spots which could be described as "nodules" were observed in the muscles of the buttock and calf... we always found an associated disc prolapse." Image
A more recent study attempted to quantify this phenomenon, and found that 71% of 271 patients diagnosed with radicular pain had sore spots in their bums, compared to only 2% of control volunteers.

Radicular pain makes your bum sore! Image
As for the other symptoms of deep gluteal syndrome - pain on sitting and pain on passive stretching tests - these too are common, in fact expected, with nerve root pain. They're symptoms of nerve sensitivity!
Basically:

Just because someone has radiating/nervey pain and a sore buttock, doesn't mean their sciatic nerve is being compressed in their buttock

In fact, that's also a classic presentation of a much more established and known-to-be-common condition: lumbar nerve root pain! Image
To put it another way, I think piriformis syndrome is much less common than the rate of its diagnosis suggests, and many people with buttock pain that travels down their leg probably have good old fashioned spinal pain.

Or...
Something I haven't even mentioned, good old fashioned hip pain!


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There's much more to say on piriformis syndrome. Does it actually exist? (Probably, it's just rare). What *does* distinguish it from spinal/hip pain? And when does all this matter, if indeed it does? But I'll leave that for another time...

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More from @thomas_jesson

Nov 7, 2023
Thread on differential diagnosis of lumbar radicular pain, aka

"I think my patient has sciatica, could it be anything else?" 🧵 Image
Firstly, this isn't meant to be a 'do it like this' tweetorial, but it's how I think of this stuff and the goal is to help you think about it, too.

Disclaimer over.
The first main differential is that it's just spinally referred pain, which is much more common than true lumbar radicular pain.
Read 24 tweets
Oct 27, 2023
I just spoke to a friend who is going to start a newsletter soon (exciting!) and it got me thinking about writing advice.

I'm don't claim to be a great writer, but here is some of the advice I try to keep in mind and that has contributed to the small successes that I have had:
The most important thing is to try to shake out the habit of writing school essays that explain class material to an imaginary teacher. This is the number one thing that kills a piece stone dead.

Instead, remember you are writing something *of value* for *an actual person*. Image
There's a youtube video that is GOLD on this topic - called "leadership lab: the craft of writing effectively"
Read 24 tweets
Oct 3, 2023
A few notes on a "loss of saddle sensation", one of the five red flags for cauda equina syndrome... 🧵 Image
Like the other CES sx (bladder, bowel & sexual dysfunction), a loss of saddle sensation is caused by compression of the lower sacral nerves.

They travel right down the middle of the lumbar cistern, so only big, central disc herniations - which are very rare - can squash them Image
Note that the 'saddle area' affected is a horse's saddle, not a bicycle saddle! It includes the inside of the thighs.

(Pic from Red Flags and Blue Lights by Greenhalgh and Selfe) Image
Read 12 tweets
Oct 2, 2023
Why would sciatica take a couple of weeks to kick in?

So often our patients describe a 'tweak', shortly followed by back pain... but their radicular pain doesn't get going until later.

Here's what might be going on... 🧵
First explanation: It could be that a disc herniation is slowly developing.

We think of disc herniations as sudden events that are over in a short time: the nucleus sort of splurges or, erm, ejaculates out, and then it sits there and causes trouble.
In fact, herniations sometimes seem to be more slowly-evolving events.

Adams and Hutton, following their observations in cadavers, coined the term 'gradual disc prolapse' in 1985. They wrote that "a prolapse may occur over days and months". Image
Read 20 tweets
Sep 29, 2023
Can you trust this man?

There's a dermatome chart in every MSK textbook, but the reality is not so clear cut... 🧵 Image
Firstly, although it's claimed that sciatica (lumbar radicular pain) follows a dermatomal pattern, this doesn't seem to be the case.
For example, Taylor et al. asked patients with L5 or S1 radicular pain to draw on a body diagram where they felt their pain.

The composite maps of L5 and S1 pain were completely indistinguishable: Image
Read 18 tweets

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