Dorsolumbar angulation: On prone films, Cobb angle was measured at upper T12 and lower L1 end plates (normal 0°; with standard deviation +3/−3). Lumbosacral angular motion: On functional films, lines were drawn on the upper end plates of L5 and S1. The resulting differences [(+)-(−)] between functional angles were compared with the normal values obtained from the literature (i.e. in excess of 26° of combined motion). The difference between standing lateral functional radiography and the prone/supine scanography was accepted. Sacral inclination: On supine films, the angle between a vertical line (a perpendicular to horizontal baseline) and the upper S1 endplate.
Dorsolumbar angulation: 26 showed (positive) kyphotic angles up to 30°−40°. Lumbosacral angular motion: In view of the spinal rigidity found in most cases, a compensatory excess mobility was expected at 5/1 level, but the opposite was confirmed. Indeed, 27 patiens showed exaggerated (negative) extension shift (of −5°−10°); amongst these 10 were with complete loss of flexion; 12 were with partial flexion (a forward shift of up to 15°), but 5 with full flexion, permitted by a lumbar kyphosis. Sacral inclination: twenty-eight patients showed a shift to a diminished angle of 25°–35° as compared to 35°–55° in 15 control spines. The patients were grouped according to the number of selected abnormal radiological parameters present. The cases were graded: Grade I (1 abnormality) – 2 cases, Grade II -13 cases and Grade III – 19 cases. The threshold for imbalance was (1) at least one severe thoracolumbar compression (or an equivalent combination of multiple minor thoraco-lumbar compression fractures) for D/L kyphosis and (2) a single lumbar fracture with at least 50% compression.
In recent personal observations, protection by ossification was recorded in a severe trauma case and in vertebrae weakened by malignant infiltration.
The next step in this study is in the ontogenetic line of the Humans. The oldest skeleton (Ethiopia, 4.5 mya) showed “bridged vertebrae“. The first definite hyperostosis was in the Shanidar skeleton (Iraq, 40–12,000 BCE) with“flowing osteophytes”. In the historic Humans since 9500 BCE, hyperostosis was found in Europeans, Egyptians, Indians (Chile) and Incas. In the Christian era, hyperostosis was present in Roman-British/ Celt populations, Franks, Saxons, British, Swiss and N. Americans. In the 20th C, it is pandemic.
b. Impressions from the Hominid world: The ontogenetic line shows a constant presence of hyperostosis in prehistoric and historic periods. Parallel to human migration from Africa, hyperostosis expanded globally. c. The theory of logical probability: It is postulated that hyperostosis is a condition, as no pathology (other than inflammatory) could have expanded and persisted in many species along millions of years, as it would have been removed by the rules of the Darwinian Selection. Possibly triggered by strain in younger age, functional in the past, it is today an atavistic older age “condition“, with increased osteoblastic activity in connective tissues of ligaments and tendons. At times it is incidentally discovered and is occasionally excessive. Once presented with clinical manifestations, it becomes defined an illness and should be called the Forestier-Resnick syndrome.