facet_joint_pathology

Facet Joint Pathology

Facet joints (zygapophyseal joints) are paired synovial joints located between the articular processes of adjacent vertebrae. They are critical for spinal stability and motion but are also a common source of axial pain.

  • Facet Joint Arthropathy (Degenerative)
    • Most common type
    • Features: cartilage loss, osteophyte formation, joint space narrowing, subchondral sclerosis
  • Facet Joint Syndrome
    • Clinical diagnosis of pain originating from facet joints
    • Confirmed by medial branch blocks or intra-articular injections
  • Facet Joint Effusion
    • Fluid in the joint seen on MRI
    • Often associated with acute pain
  • Facet Cyst
    • Synovial cysts from degenerated joints
    • May cause radiculopathy or spinal stenosis
  • Facet Joint Hypertrophy
    • Bone overgrowth contributing to foraminal or central stenosis
  • Facet Fracture or Dislocation
    • Usually post-traumatic
    • Can result in instability or neurologic compromise
Modality Role
MRI Detects joint effusion, inflammation, adjacent edema
CT Superior for bony changes: sclerosis, osteophytes
SPECT/CT Detects increased metabolic activity; identifies active pain generators
Medial Branch Block Diagnostic and therapeutic; confirms facetogenic pain
  • T2 hyperintensity within joint (effusion)
  • Joint irregularity, narrowing
  • Edema in adjacent bone
  • Conservative
    • NSAIDs
    • Physical therapy
    • Postural training
  • Interventional
    • Intra-articular steroid injections
    • Medial branch nerve blocks
    • Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) of medial branches
  • Surgical
    • Indicated in instability or refractory pain
    • Options: joint resection, spinal fusion
  • Pain is typically axial, worsened by extension/rotation
  • Often no clear correlation with MRI alone
  • SPECT/CT may reveal metabolically active joints not seen on MRI
  • facet_joint_pathology.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/05/28 06:52
  • by administrador