We reviewed the magnetic resonance (MR) images of eight adults with acute hyperextension-dislocation of the cervical spine. The images were obtained to evaluate damage to the spinal cord. All eight patients had disruption of the anterior longitudinal ligament and of the annulus of the intervertebral disc, and separation of the posterior longitudinal ligament from the subjacent
We describe two patients with an atypical congenital kyphosis in which a hypoplastic lumbar vertebral body lay in the spinal canal because of short pedicles. There were no defects in the posterior elements, or any apparent instability of the facet joints. Both patients were treated successfully by anterior fusion to the levels immediately above and below the affected
To study the associations of lumbar developmental spinal stenosis (DSS) with low back pain (LBP), radicular leg pain, and disability. This was a cross-sectional study of 2,206 subjects along with L1-S1 axial and sagittal MRI. Clinical and radiological information regarding their demographics, workload, smoking habits, anteroposterior (AP) vertebral canal diameter, spondylolisthesis, and MRI changes were evaluated. Mann-Whitney U tests and chi-squared tests were conducted to search for differences between subjects with and without DSS. Associations of LBP and radicular pain reported within one month (30 days) and one year (365 days) of the MRI, with clinical and radiological information, were also investigated by utilizing univariate and multivariate logistic regressions.Aims
Methods
We examined the pathogenesis of Schmorl’s nodes, correlating the histological findings from 12 lumbar vertebrae with the corresponding conventional radiographs, tomographs, MR images and CT scans. The last revealed round, often multiple cystic lesions with indistinct sclerotic margins beneath the cartilaginous endplate. The appearances are similar to the typical CT changes of osteonecrosis. Histological examination of en-bloc slices through Schmorl’s nodes gave clear evidence of subchondral osteonecrosis. Beneath the cartilage endplate, we found fibrosis within the marrow cavities with the disappearance of fat cells. Osteocytes within bone trabeculae were either dead or had disappeared. We suggest that Schmorl’s nodes are the end result of ischaemic necrosis beneath the cartilaginous endplate and that herniation into the body of the
A study of spondylolysis and spondylolisthesis in 142 children and adolescents is reported. In twelve of the seventy-nine patients followed for over a year the affected
1. An anatomical study of the bony structure of the pars interarticularis of the fourth and fifth lumbar vertebrae has been made in specimens from seven cadavers aged seventeen to sixty-seven. 2. Layers of cortical bone have been described antero-laterally and postero-medially which are thickest in the narrowest region of the pars. 3. In one specimen from a seventeen-year-old male, a healing fracture was found in the antero-lateral layer of cortical bone in the right neural arch of the fourth lumbar
Some radiological features of the lumbar spine of 84 patients with spastic diplegia were compared with 50 control subjects. The average age of the patients was 20.1 years (3 to 39). Spondylolysis of the fifth lumbar
Twenty-eight patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis treated by anterior spinal fusion with Dwyer instrumentation were reviewed. The average length of follow-up was 6.9 years. This technique produced better correction of lateral curvature and rotation than Harrington instrumentation, particularly in the thoracolumbar and lumbar region. The length of spine requiring fusion was also shorter. There is, however, a tendency for Dwyer instrumentation to lead to kyphosis. Morbidity was significant and included one case of paraplegia, four cases of deep infection and one case of instrument failure. All of these complications, except one case of deep infection, occurred in patients with curves with an apex above the seventh thoracic
Spines are often stabilised posteriorly by internal fixation and anteriorly by a bone graft. The effect of an autologous bone graft from the iliac crest on implant loads is unknown. We used an internal spinal fixation device with telemetry to measure implant loads for several body positions and activities in nine patients before and after anterior interbody fusion. With the body upright, implant loads were often higher after than before fusion using a bone graft. Distraction of the bridged region led to high implant loads in patients with a fractured
1. Resolving infantile scoliosis is transient and unimportant; progressive infantile idiopathic scoliosis can be catastrophic. 2. To be able to differentiate the two at an early stage is a considerable advance. This is important for many reasons, but particularly for parents who are anxious for the future of an infant with a small curve which looks so innocent but which can be so malignant. 3. With the new observations reported by Mehta on the difference of the angles between the apical
1. Fifteen patients with spina bifida occulta are described in whom the fifth lumbar spinous process was pressing on the fibrous membrane that closes the spina bifida, or on the bony stumps of the defective lamina. 2. That this is a cause of low back pain, with or without pain referred to the lower limbs, is supported by the findings at operation and the results of treatment. 3. Eleven patients were treated by operation; in each the spinous process of the fifth lumbar
The different methods described in the literature for the reduction of severe spondylolisthesis are reviewed. The case histories of two girls with neurological deficits in their legs due to Grade IV spondylolisthesis are described. Reduction and fusion by the posterior route in a one-stage operation were performed on these patients. For this purpose special instruments have been designed to exert a controlled force on the displaced
1. An unusual congenital anomaly of the cervical spine is described. This lesion caused a localised cervical kyphosis and resulted in the development of a mild tetraparesis. 2. The case reported is believed to be the first on record in the English literature of multiple posterior hemivertebrae in the cervical region. 3. The neck deformity was associated with an unusual combination of developmental anomalies–namely, brachyphalangy and bilateral congenital optic atrophy. 4. The importance of differentiating between congenital and acquired causes of kyphosis is emphasised. 5. The radiographic appearances of posterior hemivertebra are described, and the differential diagnosis is considered. 6. The development of the vertebral body, and the relationship between coronal cleft
Spondylolisthesis without a defect in the neural arch, the "pseudo-spondylolisthesis" of Junghanns, usually affects the fourth lumbar
1. The results of 243 thoracoplasty operations are discussed. It was found that scoliosis developed in over 99 per cent of cases and that the curve was convex towards the side of operation. The angle of curvature correlated closely with the number of ribs removed. 2. If the head, neck and tubercle of the rib and the transverse process of the corresponding
We describe 100 consecutive patients with osteoid osteoma. Of the 97 who had operations, 89 were treated by intralesional excision and eight by wide resection. The three remaining patients were not operated on because the osteoid osteoma was almost painless, or was found in the pedicle of the 12th thoracic
A modification of a previously reported one-stage technique for reduction and stabilisation of severe spondylolisthesis using a posterior route is described. Reduction is obtained by inserting Harrington rods to lift L5 vertically out of the pelvis and two double-threaded screws to pull it backwards. After reduction the rods are taken away and stabilisation achieved by means of screws and a sacral bar. With this modified technique lumbar vertebrae above L5 are never immobilised, compared with the previous method where the retention of the Harrington rods resulted in more lumbar vertebrae being immobilised than was necessary for fusion. Bone is resected from the sacrum and the fifth lumbar
1. A twenty-six-year-old woman was paraplegic because of a benign giant-cell tumour which had destroyed the body of the twelfth thoracic
1 . Young Wistar rats fed on a diet containing 0·3 per cent semicarbazide hydrochloride developed the characteristic lesions of osteolathyrism. This consisted of kyphoscoliosis, displacement of epiphyses and dislocations of joints. A pathological study of the skeletal lesions showed widening, disorganisation and tears of the epiphysial plate with the zone of maturing cartilage showing the greatest increase in width. The severe kyphoscoliosis was due to a derangement and displacement at and through the epiphysial plates of the twelfth thoracic or first lumbar
The principle of Occam's razor proves nothing. Nevertheless, it is possible to explain all the phenomena of severe scoliosis on the basis of a primary rotation deformity alone. The typical rotation type of scoliotic deformity can be reproduced artificially by fitting vertebrae together in an abnormal rotatory relationship without any element of lateral flexion. From this, certain mechanical factors inevitably come into play which must tend to increase the deformity. Above all, the forces responsible for progressive scoliosis are dynamic and active, not just passive. The spine readily compensates for a passive, non-progressive deformity such as a simple wedge