Next time a healthcare provider suggests a scan for routine joint or back pain, ask one question: "What percentage of people my age with zero pain would show this same finding?" If they can't answer — or the answer is "most of them" — that changes what you should do next.
An MRI is like a highly sensitive smoke alarm that goes off for burnt toast and actual fires alike. It will find something in almost every adult over 40 — that's not diagnosis, that's the detector doing its job. The real question isn't what the alarm is detecting; it's whether there's actually a fire. That answer comes from a clinical assessment, not the alarm.
Next time a scan is suggested for routine joint or back pain, ask: "What percentage of people my age with zero pain would show this same finding?"
If the answer is "most of them" — and for adults over 40 it often is — that changes what the finding actually means for your treatment decision.
One question. Zero cost. Potentially prevents unnecessary procedures.
The Verdict
Your scan shows aging, not damage — and getting one early makes your outcome worse, not better.
An MRI is like a highly sensitive smoke alarm that goes off for burnt toast and actual fires alike. It will find something in almost every adult over 40 — that's not a diagnosis, that's the detector doing its job. The real question isn't what the alarm is detecting; it's whether there's actually a fire. That answer comes from a clinical assessment, not the alarm.
Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling
What's Actually Going On
High-resolution imaging is extraordinarily sensitive. It detects every structural change your body has made in response to decades of living — and in the absence of actual danger, almost all of those changes are meaningless.
In 1994, Jensen and colleagues published a landmark paper in the New England Journal of Medicine showing 52% of completely asymptomatic people had disc bulges on lumbar MRI. Three decades later, Brinjikji's systematic review of 3,110 pain-free individuals confirmed the pattern holds — and gets more pronounced with age.
This isn't a flaw in imaging technology. It's doing exactly what it's designed to do: detect structural changes. The flaw is in assuming those changes explain the pain.
| Region | Finding | Prevalence | Age Group |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lumbar Spine | Disc Degeneration | 37–52% → 88–96% | Age 20–39 → 60+ |
| Lumbar Spine | Disc Bulge | 30–40% → 69–84% | Age 20–39 → 60+ |
| Cervical Spine | Disc Bulging | 87.6% overall | Any adult |
| Shoulder | Rotator Cuff Tear (full) | 11–17% | Population adults |
| Knee | Meniscal Tear | 4% → 19% | Under 40 → Over 40 |
| Knee | Any Abnormality | 97% | Median age 44 |
| Hip | Labral Tear | 41–69% | 15–66 years |
How to Identify It — Imaging Triage
The question isn't "should we scan?" — it's "will this scan result change what we do?" For most MSK presentations, the answer is no. For specific red-flag presentations, imaging is non-negotiable.
ACR Appropriateness Criteria 2021: Advanced imaging medically necessary only after history, physical exam, and failed conservative management — NOT as a first-line diagnostic tool for non-specific MSK pain.
Red Flags
This is not an anti-imaging argument. Missing serious pathology is catastrophic. These presentations require immediate imaging — no delay, no conservative trial first.
The Debate
OLDER PRACTICE (pre-2009)
"Order MRI to confirm disc herniation and guide treatment" — standard care for many LBP presentations
Jacobs 2020, N=405,965 VHA Cohort
Early MRI (within 6 weeks): 12.7× higher surgery rate, 3× higher cost, MORE opioid prescriptions, WORSE outcomes at 1 year
OLDER PRACTICE (pre-2013)
"MRI confirms degenerative meniscal tear → arthroscopic partial meniscectomy as standard of care"
Sihvonen 2013, NEJM (FIDELITY trial), N=146
APM = sham surgery at 12 months. No difference in Lysholm score, no difference in knee pain during exercise. The operation was placebo.
OLDER PRACTICE (pre-2002)
"Arthroscopic debridement and lavage for knee OA — standard surgical option"
Moseley 2002, NEJM, N=180
Arthroscopy = sham incision at 24 months. Clinically equivalent pain and function scores. This was one of the most consequential sham trials in surgical history.
Honest Limitations
The data is clear. The behaviour hasn't changed. Here's why.
THE RESEARCH
Clinical examination alone produces equivalent outcomes to scan-first pathways for non-specific MSK pain
THE REAL-WORLD GAP
Patients equate imaging with quality care. Refusing a scan feels like dismissal. This erodes the therapeutic alliance and drives "doctor shopping" until someone orders the scan.
THE RESEARCH
Webster 2021: 59–71% of patients viewed terms like "disc degeneration" as serious; 42–57% became fearful of movement just from reading the words in their report
THE REAL-WORLD GAP
Radiologists accurately describe what they see. Clinicians rarely have the time to re-frame those findings in context. The patient reads the report alone — and catastrophises.
THE RESEARCH
Structured red-flag screening by experienced clinicians identifies serious pathology effectively without routine scanning
THE REAL-WORLD GAP
Clinicians fear missing a rare catastrophic pathology more than they fear the aggregate harms of overdiagnosis. One lawsuit is more salient than 10,000 unnecessary surgeries in data.
What Works
Structured education on pain as a brain output — not a structural readout. Explicitly reframe the scan finding using age-prevalence data. Multiple RCTs (Louw, Moseley) show PNE reduces pain intensity, disability, and healthcare use. Deliver before the loading program, not alongside it. HIGH
Immediately reframe "damage" language. Provide the 100-person prevalence data. Introduce the feared movement gradually — loading is therapeutic when the patient understands why it's safe. Avoid rest prescriptions, which confirm the false belief that tissue is fragile. HIGH
Never use: "tear," "degeneration," "wear and tear," "herniation," "damage," "arthritis." Use instead: "normal aging changes," "common finding in your age group," "not dangerous," "safe to load."
Disc degeneration script: "If we scanned 100 people your age with zero back pain, over 80 would have the same MRI. This tells us there's no dangerous disease. Your spine is safe to move."
Meniscal tear script: "For your age, we call this a cartilage wrinkle, not damage. Research shows surgery on these wrinkles gives the exact same result as a sham operation."
Once re-framing is established, progress to the appropriate loading protocol for the underlying condition (see relevant protocol cards: non-specific LBP, knee OA, rotator cuff, etc.). Loading remodels tissue and reduces central sensitisation. The scan finding does not change the loading program — the clinical findings do.
Return to Training
A scan result alone is not a reason to stop training. Use these criteria to guide the decision:
Key principle: Load should be guided by symptom response, not radiological appearance. Tissue adapts to load. Avoidance leads to deconditioning → increased pain sensitivity → more pain. The scan did not change the tissue; it just described it.
The Nuance
The argument here is not that imaging is bad. It's that timing and indication determine whether it helps or harms.
There is a specific window where MRI demonstrably changes outcomes: the patient with genuine structural pathology (true disc compression, labral tear in a surgical candidate, stress fracture not visible on X-ray) who has failed a supervised conservative trial. In these cases, imaging does what it's supposed to — it identifies a structural problem that a targeted intervention can fix.
The harm occurs when this tool is used outside its intended window: as a first-line diagnostic response to generic pain, or as a way to validate a patient's suffering rather than guide their treatment.
The other underappreciated nuance is the communication problem. Radiology reports use precise anatomical language that is accurate within its context. "Disc herniation at L4/L5 with thecal sac contact" is a factual description. But to a patient reading it alone on a Tuesday night, it reads as catastrophe. The nocebo harm isn't from the imaging itself — it's from the absence of clinical context around that report.
What would change this protocol: A large multi-center RCT showing immediate MRI for non-specific acute MSK pain (no red flags) produces superior long-term outcomes without inflating surgical rates. Currently no such evidence exists (Chou 2009 systematic review; ACR 2021).
Sources
How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.
Physio conditions reviewed against clinical evidence. What works, what doesn't, and what to do — from a practising physiotherapist.
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