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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 43-B, Issue 1 | Pages 141 - 151
1 Feb 1961
Mitchell PEG Hendry NGC Billewicz WZ

Two groups of intervertebral discs, one normal, as obtained from the post-mortem room, the other prolapsed, as removed at operation, have been compared by chemical analysis of their principal constituents. There is a progression of chemical changes associated with the ageing of the normal disc. This shows not only the expected slight increase in collagen as age advances, but also, surprisingly, that the polysaccharide content rises to a maximum in the fourth decade, in the same way as does polysaccharide in costal cartilage. In prolapsed discs the ageing process is superseded by a different and distinctive progression, which advances, not according to age, but according to the duration of the prolapse. There is a critical level to which the polysaccharide content must apparently fall, irrespective of the normal level for the patient's age, before a prolapse occurs. Normal ageing probably consists in the breakdown of a particular polysaccharide/protein linkage, with coincident "maturation" of collagen. In the prolapsing disc multiple, and possibly different, linkages are rapidly broken down. This depolymerisation of a gel structure must be presumed to be the basis of the decreased imbibition capacity of the nucleus pulposus, and to be the source of the hydrostatic abnormalities which result in disc prolapse.

In both normal and prolapsing discs the products of mucopolysaccharide breakdown appear to participate in the metabolism of collagen.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 68-B, Issue 5 | Pages 729 - 733
1 Nov 1986
Greenough C Dimmock S Edwards D Ransford A Bentley G

Computerised tomography of the lumbar spine was performed on 22 patients with clinical evidence of prolapse of an intervertebral disc and normal or equivocal radiculograms. Of 11 patients with positive scans who had an operation the presence of pathology was confirmed in 10. Although CT scanning is always helpful in diagnosing disc disorders, where facilities are scarce (as in Great Britain) it is best employed in patients with negative or non-contributory radiculography.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 57-B, Issue 4 | Pages 471 - 477
1 Nov 1975
Benson MKD Byrnes DP

Doubt remains as to the safest surgical approach to the prolapsed thoracic intervertebral disc. Laminectomy, lateral rhachotomy and the transthoracic approach all have their protagonists. Twenty-two patients from the National Hospital for Nervous Diseases, Queen Square, and Atkinson Morley's Hospital have been reviewed. Their clinical presentation is discussed and the ancillary aids to diagnosis assessed. The diagnostic value of disc space calcification is stressed, and the use of air myelography as an adjunct to positive contrast myelography is noted. Fifteen patients were subjected to laminectomy, and seven to lateral rhachotomy. Each group contained patients with a wide range of neurological deficit. Six of the patients who underwent laminectomy were improved, two were unchanged, six deteriorated and one died. Of the patients who had lateral rhachotomy, six were improved, one was unchanged and none deteriorated. The conclusion is drawn that lateral rhachotomy is a safer procedure


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 72-B, Issue 5 | Pages 914 - 916
1 Sep 1990
Gunzburg R Fraser R Fraser G

We report the cases of teenage twin girls presenting within months of each other with severe symptoms from lumbosacral disc prolapses, requiring laminectomy in one and chemonucleolysis in the other. CT scans showed similarities in spinal configuration, including the presence of disc bulges at the L4-5 level. This suggests a strong hereditary factor in prolapse of intervertebral discs, but a review of the literature showed little information on that aspect


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 96-B, Issue 6 | Pages 717 - 723
1 Jun 2014
Altaf F Heran MKS Wilson LF

Back pain is a common symptom in children and adolescents. Here we review the important causes, of which defects and stress reactions of the pars interarticularis are the most common identifiable problems. More serious pathology, including malignancy and infection, needs to be excluded when there is associated systemic illness. Clinical evaluation and management may be difficult and always requires a thorough history and physical examination. Diagnostic imaging is obtained when symptoms are persistent or severe. Imaging is used to reassure the patient, relatives and carers, and to guide management.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2014;96-B:717–23.