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The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 57-B, Issue 4 | Pages 500 - 505
1 Nov 1975
Ritsilä V Alhopuro S

The effect of early fusion on growth of the spine has been studied in rabbits. Free periosteal grafts from the tibia were transplanted either posteriorly between the spinous and articular processes or postero-laterally between the articular and transverse processes. Sound bony fusion was achieved in both the thoracic and the lumbar spine. Spinal fusion caused local narrowing and wedging of the intervertebral spaces, followed by retardation of growth and wedging of the vertebrae. A progressive structural scoliosis developed after unilateral postero-lateral fusion and a lordosis developed after posterior fusion


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 2 | Pages 225 - 231
1 Mar 2004
Fujii K Katoh S Sairyo K Ikata T Yasui N

Lumbar spondylolysis can heal with conservative treatment, but few attempts have been made to identify factors which may affect union of the defects in the pars. We have evaluated, retrospectively, the effects of prognostic variables on bony union of pars defects in 134 young patients less than 18 years of age with 239 defects of the pars who had been treated conservatively. All patients were evaluated by CT scans when first seen and more than six months later at follow-up. The results showed that the spinal level and the stage of the defects were the predominant factors. The site of the defects in the pars, the presence or development of spondylolisthesis, the condition of the contralateral pars, the degree of lumbar lordosis and the degree of lumbar inclination all significantly affected union


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1368 - 1374
3 Oct 2020
McDonnell JM Ahern DP Lui DF Yu H Lehovsky J Noordeen H Molloy S Butler JS Gibson A

Aims

Whether a combined anteroposterior fusion or a posterior-only fusion is more effective in the management of patients with Scheuermann’s kyphosis remains controversial. The aim of this study was to compare the radiological and clinical outcomes of these surgical approaches, and to evaluate the postoperative complications with the hypothesis that proximal junctional kyphosis would be more common in one-stage posterior-only fusion.

Methods

A retrospective review of patients treated surgically for Scheuermann’s kyphosis between 2006 and 2014 was performed. A total of 62 patients were identified, with 31 in each group. Parameters were compared to evaluate postoperative outcomes using chi-squared tests, independent-samples t-tests, and z-tests of proportions analyses where applicable.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 65-B, Issue 3 | Pages 247 - 254
1 May 1983
Hefti F McMaster M

Twenty-four children with infantile or juvenile idiopathic scoliosis had their spines corrected and solidly fused posteriorly before the age of eleven years. The growth of the fusion area was then accurately measured for a mean of 4.5 years during the adolescent growth spurt. During this period all longitudinal growth in the posterior elements ceased. The vertebral bodies continued to grow anteriorly, but the thick posterior fusion prevented the development of a lordosis. Initially the anterior growth was accommodated by narrowing of the intervertebral disc spaces, but eventually the vertebral bodies bulged laterally towards the convexity and pivoted on the posterior fusion, giving rise to loss of correction, increasing vertebral rotation and recurrence of the rib hump


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 67-B, Issue 4 | Pages 625 - 629
1 Aug 1985
Adams M Hutton W

A series of experiments showing how posture affects the lumbar spine is reviewed. Postures which flatten (that is, flex) the lumbar spine are compared with those that preserve the lumbar lordosis. Our review shows that flexed postures have several advantages: flexion improves the transport of metabolites in the intervertebral discs, reduces the stresses on the apophyseal joints and on the posterior half of the annulus fibrosus, and gives the spine a high compressive strength. Flexion also has disadvantages: it increases the stress on the anterior annulus and increases the hydrostatic pressure in the nucleus pulposus at low load levels. The disadvantages are not of much significance and we conclude that it is mechanically and nutritionally advantageous to flatten the lumbar spine when sitting and when lifting heavy weights


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 69-B, Issue 4 | Pages 576 - 581
1 Aug 1987
Smith R Dickson R

Progressive structural scoliosis in growing rabbits has been produced. Tethering the thoracic spine into the form of an asymmetric lordosis produces a slowly progressive structural scoliosis by purely mechanical means. The addition of a contralateral release of the paraspinal muscles leads to a very progressive deformity with early cardiorespiratory failure. This release, however, was performed with an electric soldering iron and subsequent study showed that in those animals with severe progressive deformity there was localised spinal cord damage. We suggest that it is this neural damage and not the muscle release which leads to rapid progression. The clinical implications are important in that neurological dysfunction seems to render the spinal column less able to resist mechanical buckling and may be the crucial factor differentiating severely progressive from more benign curves


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 62-B, Issue 2 | Pages 155 - 157
1 May 1980
McPhee I O'Brien J

The association between spondylolisthesis and scoliosis was studied in 84 patients who presented during a 30-year period with symptomatic spondylolisthesis. The incidence of scoliosis was 42 per cent, the majority of cases being lumbar or thoracolumbar curves of less than 15 degrees. The incidence was highest in the group of patients with spondylolisthesis at L4--5 where all except one had scoliosis. Scoliosis was present in 47 per cent of patients with dysplastic spondylolisthesis at the lumbosacral junction; in this group, the incidence of scoliosis was greater where the displacement exceeded 25 per cent. The lowest incidence (25 per cent) was found in the group with isthmic spondylolisthesis at the lumbosacral junction. There appeared to be no relationship between excessive lumbar lordosis or tightness of the hamstrings and scoliosis


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 70-B, Issue 2 | Pages 261 - 266
1 Mar 1988
Jefferson R Weisz I Turner-Smith A Harris J Houghton G

Thirty-four patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis were assessed by radiography and the integrated shape imaging system (ISIS) both before and after spinal surgery. Twenty-seven patients underwent Harrington instrumentation, after which lateral indices of curvature were significantly improved, but changes in the transverse plane were less pronounced. Sublaminar wiring was carried out in two patients whose thoracic lordosis was corrected by the surgery. Five patients whose severe deformity had persisted after previous spinal surgery underwent costoplasty, which resulted in a significant improvement in back shape measurements. We conclude that the cosmetic deformity of the back in scoliosis is only partially corrected by operations on the spine itself, whilst costoplasty addresses the problem directly, and improves the surface shape


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 79-B, Issue 2 | Pages 197 - 203
1 Mar 1997
McMaster MJ

Fifteen patients with ankylosing spondylitis who had developed a severe flexion deformity of the cervical spine which restricted their field of vision to their feet, were treated by an extension osteotomy at the C7/T1 level. The operation was performed under general anaesthesia with the patient in the prone position and wearing a halo-jacket. Three had internal fixation using a Luque rectangle and wiring. Their mean age was 48 years. Before operation the mean cervical kyphosis was 23°; this was corrected to a mean of 31° of lordosis, a mean correction of 54°. All the patients were able to see straight ahead. One patient with normal neurology soon after operation became quadraparetic after one week; two others had unilateral palsy of the C8 root, which improved. There was subluxation at the site of osteotomy in four patients, and two of them developed a pseudarthrosis which required an anterior fusion


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 71-B, Issue 2 | Pages 259 - 263
1 Mar 1989
Cruickshank J Koike M Dickson R

We have developed a simple technique for demonstrating the sagittal profile of each rotated level of a scoliotic spine and used it to determine the patterns of lordosis and kyphosis in each of six clinical types of idiopathic scoliosis. The currently accepted classification of scoliosis is inaccurate and a modification is proposed. The three main types of scoliosis were shown to have sagittal profiles distinctly different from each other and from normal. Single structural curves had short lordotic sections at their apices, limited above and below by kyphosis. Double curves showed longer lordotic sections limited only by one area of kyphosis. Lordosis throughout the thoracic and lumbar spine was associated with triple curve patterns. The biomechanical effects of the abnormal sagittal profiles provide a simple explanation for the genesis and progression of the different types of scoliosis, and the recognition of the pattern of the sagittal abnormalities permits treatment to be designed on a sound anatomical basis for individual cases


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 83-B, Issue 1 | Pages 106 - 111
1 Jan 2001
Brown R Hussain M McHugh K Novelli V Jones D

Discitis is uncommon in children and presents in different ways at different ages. It is most difficult to diagnose in the uncommunicative toddler of one to three years of age. We present 11 consecutive cases. The non-specific clinical features included refusal to walk (63%), back pain (27%), inability to flex the lower back (50%) and a loss of lumbar lordosis (40%). Laboratory tests were unhelpful and cultures of blood and disc tissue were negative. MRI reduces the diagnostic delay and may help to avoid the requirement for a biopsy. In 75% of cases it demonstrated a paravertebral inflammatory mass, which helped to determine the duration of the oral therapy given after initial intravenous antibiotics. At a mean follow-up of 21 months (10 to 40), all the spines were mobile and the patients free from pain. Radiological fusion occurred in 20% and was predictable after two years. At follow-up, MRI showed variable appearances: changes in the vertebral body usually resolved at 24 months and recovery of the disc was seen after 34 months


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 2 | Pages 261 - 267
1 Feb 2020
Tøndevold N Lastikka M Andersen T Gehrchen M Helenius I

Aims

It is uncertain whether instrumented spinal fixation in nonambulatory children with neuromuscular scoliosis should finish at L5 or be extended to the pelvis. Pelvic fixation has been shown to be associated with up to 30% complication rates, but is regarded by some as the standard for correction of deformity in these conditions. The incidence of failure when comparing the most caudal level of instrumentation, either L5 or the pelvis, using all-pedicle screw instrumentation has not previously been reported. In this retrospective study, we compared nonambulatory patients undergoing surgery at two centres: one that routinely instrumented to L5 and the other to the pelvis.

Methods

In all, 91 nonambulatory patients with neuromuscular scoliosis were included. All underwent surgery using bilateral, segmental, pedicle screw instrumentation. A total of 40 patients underwent fusion to L5 and 51 had their fixation extended to the pelvis. The two groups were assessed for differences in terms of clinical and radiological findings, as well as complications.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 67-B, Issue 2 | Pages 189 - 192
1 Mar 1985
Deacon P Berkin C Dickson R

A radiological study of 50 patients with thoracic Scheuermann's disease revealed two types of lateral spinal curvature. A total of 43 lateral curves was present in 35 of the patients. Thirteen were apical at the same level as the Scheuermann's kyphosis and were due to vertebral-body wedging in the coronal plane; these curves had a mean Cobb angle of 15 degrees, occurred with equal prevalence in boys and girls and were directed equally to right and left. Thirty curves occurred in regions of compensatory lordosis (mean 5.6 degrees) situated above or, more commonly, below the Scheuermann's kyphosis. These scolioses had a mean Cobb angle of 16 degrees, were more often convex to the right than to the left and were significantly more prevalent in girls than in boys. The presence of these kyphoses and scolioses in the same spine, separated by only a few vertebrae, emphasises the importance of the sagittal plane in idiopathic spinal deformities and strongly suggests that idiopathic scoliosis and Scheuermann's disease share a common pathological process


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 7 Supple B | Pages 41 - 46
1 Jul 2020
Ransone M Fehring K Fehring T

Aims

Patients with abnormal spinopelvic mobility are at increased risk for instability. Measuring the change in sacral slope (ΔSS) can help determine spinopelvic mobility preoperatively. Sacral slope (SS) should decrease at least 10° to demonstrate adequate posterior pelvic tilt. There is potential for different ΔSS measurements in the same patient based on sitting posture. The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of sitting posture on the ΔSS in patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty (THA).

Methods

In total, 51 patients undergoing THA were reviewed to quantify the variability in preoperative spinopelvic mobility when measuring two different sitting positions using SS for planning.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 48-B, Issue 3 | Pages 407 - 423
1 Aug 1966
Holt S Yates PO

1. One hundred and twenty cervical spines removed at routine necropsy from elderly patients dying in a general hospital have been examined. 2. There was some degree of degeneration of intervertebral discs in 110 cases–in forty-six this was severe. 3. Degenerative disc disease was found at an earlier age in men; mild damage preceded severe degeneration and collapse by about a decade. 4. Discs of the lower spine were most frequently and most severely affected. 5. Alterations of the normal cervical lordosis were produced by disc disease in thirty-two cases. 6. Osteoarthritis of the apophysial joints was found in seventy-eight, and by contrast to disc degeneration was commonest in the mid-cervical and upper cervical regions. In eighteen it was severe. 7. Degeneration and scarring of nerve roots was frequently associated with diseased discs; apophysial joint arthritis was found to be an important additional factor when it occurred in the lower cervical region. 8. No nerve root changes could be attributed to ischaemia resulting from narrowing or distortion of the vertebral arteries. 9. Cystic arachnoidal diverticula which excavate the posterior root ganglia were found in thirty-six cases


Bone & Joint 360
Vol. 8, Issue 2 | Pages 31 - 33
1 Apr 2019


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 102-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1311 - 1318
3 Oct 2020
Huang Y Gao Y Li Y Ding L Liu J Qi X

Aims

Morphological abnormalities are present in patients with developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH). We studied and compared the pelvic anatomy and morphology between the affected hemipelvis with the unaffected side in patients with unilateral Crowe type IV DDH using 3D imaging and analysis.

Methods

A total of 20 patients with unilateral Crowe-IV DDH were included in the study. The contralateral side was considered normal in all patients. A coordinate system based on the sacral base (SB) in a reconstructed pelvic model was established. The pelvic orientations (tilt, rotation, and obliquity) of the affected side were assessed by establishing a virtual anterior pelvic plane (APP). The bilateral coordinates of the anterior superior iliac spine (ASIS) and the centres of hip rotation were established, and parameters concerning size and volume were compared for both sides of the pelvis.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 7 | Pages 817 - 823
1 Jul 2019
Vigdorchik J Eftekhary N Elbuluk A Abdel MP Buckland AJ Schwarzkopf RS Jerabek SA Mayman DJ

Aims

While previously underappreciated, factors related to the spine contribute substantially to the risk of dislocation following total hip arthroplasty (THA). These factors must be taken into consideration during preoperative planning for revision THA due to recurrent instability. We developed a protocol to assess the functional position of the spine, the significance of these findings, and how to address different pathologies at the time of revision THA.

Patients and Methods

Prospectively collected data on 111 patients undergoing revision THA for recurrent instability from January 2014 to January 2017 at two institutions were included (protocol group) and matched 1:1 to 111 revisions specifically performed for instability not using this protocol (control group). Mean follow-up was 2.8 years. Protocol patients underwent standardized preoperative imaging including supine and standing anteroposterior (AP) pelvis and lateral radiographs. Each case was scored according to the Hip-Spine Classification in Revision THA.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 2 | Pages 198 - 206
1 Feb 2019
Salib CG Reina N Perry KI Taunton MJ Berry DJ Abdel MP

Aims

Concurrent hip and spine pathologies can alter the biomechanics of spinopelvic mobility in primary total hip arthroplasty (THA). This study examines how differences in pelvic orientation of patients with spine fusions can increase the risk of dislocation risk after THA.

Patients and Methods

We identified 84 patients (97 THAs) between 1998 and 2015 who had undergone spinal fusion prior to primary THA. Patients were stratified into three groups depending on the length of lumbar fusion and whether or not the sacrum was involved. Mean age was 71 years (40 to 87) and 54 patients (56%) were female. The mean body mass index (BMI) was 30 kg/m2 (19 to 45). Mean follow-up was six years (2 to 17). Patients were 1:2 matched to patients with primary THAs without spine fusion. Hazard ratios (HR) were calculated.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 101-B, Issue 7 | Pages 808 - 816
1 Jul 2019
Eftekhary N Shimmin A Lazennec JY Buckland A Schwarzkopf R Dorr LD Mayman D Padgett D Vigdorchik J

There remains confusion in the literature with regard to the spinopelvic relationship, and its contribution to ideal acetabular component position. Critical assessment of the literature has been limited by use of conflicting terminology and definitions of new concepts that further confuse the topic. In 2017, the concept of a Hip-Spine Workgroup was created with the first meeting held at the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons Annual Meeting in 2018. The goal of this workgroup was to first help standardize terminology across the literature so that as a topic, multiple groups could produce literature that is immediately understandable and applicable. This consensus review from the Hip-Spine Workgroup aims to simplify the spinopelvic relationship, offer hip surgeons a concise summary of available literature, and select common terminology approved by both hip surgeons and spine surgeons for future research.

Cite this article: Bone Joint J 2019;101-B:808–816.