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261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Clinical significance of lumbar lordosis has not been agreed on. Our purpose is to compare lordotic measurements of normal and pain subjects and to test the validity of a new anthropometric model of lumbar curvatures. Digitized radiographic points (body corners) from standing lateral lumbar radiographs were modeled with ellipses in a least-squares method and were used to create segmental angles, a global angle at L1-L5, a Cobb angle from T12 to S1, Ferguson's sacral base angle, and an angle of pelvic tilt. Fifty normal subjects were matched in age, sex, weight, and height with 50 acute pain subjects, 50 chronic pain subjects, and 24 pain subjects with radiographic abnormalities. Of 11 angles, 2 distances, and 2 ratios, statistical analysis was significantly different across groups for 12 of these measurements, with the alternative hypotheses accepted for the other 3 measurements. The lordosis of both normal and low back pain subjects can be successfully modeled with a portion (approximately 86 degrees) of an ellipse, but with different major and minor axis ratios. The normal group's average elliptic lordosis has the smallest least-squares error, approximately 1 mm per digitized point, with (minor axis)/(major axis) ratio = 0.39, L1-L5 global angle = 40 degrees, and Cobb angle = 65 degrees. The chronic and radiographic abnormalities pain groups have an elongated ellipse with hypolordosis, reduced L1-L5 global angle = 29.6-35 degrees, reduced Cobb angle = 57-58 degrees, and elliptic axis ratio = 0.27-0.30. The acute pain group is hyperlordotic with the largest L1-L5 global angle, largest Cobb angle = 70 degrees, largest Ferguson's angle, and largest pelvic tilt angle.
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PMID:Elliptical modeling of the sagittal lumbar lordosis and segmental rotation angles as a method to discriminate between normal and low back pain subjects. 981 Nov 4

Percutaneous spinal cord stimulation (SCS) (Medtronic model 3487A PISCES-Quad lead) was carried out in 10 patients with rest pain from advanced peripheral vascular disease of the lower limb, who were unsuitable for conventional treatment. Trial stimulation ranged from 1-20 weeks and was associated with pain relief in nine of the patients. Claudication distance was improved in six patients. Trophic lesions improved in one patient with small artery disease. Spinal cord stimulation did not reverse the course of acute gangrenous lesions. The distal arterial pressure measured by Doppler Ankle/Brachial Pressure Index, (ABPI), showed no change. The capillary blood flow and skin temperature of both feet, measured, respectively, by Laser Doppler flowmetry and skin thermistor, showed a tendency to decrease when the stimulation was at the higher level, above T10, compared with an increase when the stimulation was at the lower level T12. Transcutaneous oxygen tension monitoring of the symptomatic foot showed an increase in four out of five patients. Pain relief was not dependent on circulatory changes, but it was more significant when the circulatory changes showed an impressive increase in the blood flow. The mechanism of these circulatory changes is probably by modulation of the sympathetic nervous system. Recognition of the optimal sitting of SCS may be critical in the clinical use of this technique, which seems to be a valuable option in the treatment of patients with advanced peripheral vascular disease (PVD).
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PMID:The differential effect of the level of spinal cord stimulation on patients with advanced peripheral vascular disease in the lower limbs. 1007 Apr 41

The combined use of bone SPET and CT was a good approach for diagnosing an osteoid osteoma of spine in a 16-year-old young woman with a history of several months of back pain. Pain was increased at night and relieved by aspirin intake. Plain films of the spine only revealed a scoliosis. Bone SPET demonstrated a focal increased activity in the left posterior elements of T12 vertebra. CT of this vertebra discovered a lytic lesion in the left lamina. An osteoid osteoma was removed by laminectomy.
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PMID:[Localization by bone SPET of osteoid osteoma in the vertebral lamina]. 1007 18

Clinically, thoracic disc herniation occurs much less frequently than herniation in the cervical or lumbar regions, and accounts for only 0.15 to 1.8% of all intervertebral discs treated surgically. Classically, open thoracotomy is the standard procedure for thoracic disc herniation, but this type of surgery can cause prolonged postoperative wound pain that jeopardizes the mechanism of respiration and postoperative rehabilitation. We report the case of a 41-year-old woman with a symptomatic T11-T12 thoracic disc herniation and cord compression. Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) was performed to remove the herniated disc successfully. Intraoperatively, there was no injury to vital organs or the spinal cord. The total operating time was 3.5 hours, and the estimated blood loss was 400 ml. Postoperatively, the incisional pain was minimal, and no intercostal neuralgia was noted. At her 2-year follow-up examination, she was fully ambulatory and free of pain. This type of minimally invasive procedure is a good alternative to the classic thoracotomy and proved to be a safe and effective procedure for this patient.
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PMID:Thoracic disc herniation treated by video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery: case report. 1007 33

Using a pressure algometer pain threshold (PT) measurements were carried out in the paraspinal area as well as at the knee and ankle joints in 30 adults with active rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and in 30 healthy adults. The group of RA patients was then randomly divided in two. In 15 RA patients a manual oscillation technique was applied at T12 and L4 for 12 minutes. The 15 other patients were resting. Immediately after the experimental procedure the PT was measured again at the same points in all patients. The RA patients showed a significantly (p < 0.05) lower PT than the healthy adults at all investigated points, which suggests that in RA certain changes arise in the peripheral and central nociceptive processing system, as mentioned in the literature. In the second measurement session for the RA patients the PT was significantly higher (p<0.05) after manual oscillations than after rest, at the paraspinal area of T6, L1 and L3. Further research into the long-term effect of repeated manual oscillation sessions is warranted.
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PMID:Pain threshold in patients with rheumatoid arthritis and effect of manual oscillations. 1022 37

A 30-year-old healthy woman was involved in a road traffic accident. She sustained a fracture dislocation of T11/12 with a complete Frankel A paraplegia below T11. She had no associated injuries. High Dose Methylprednisolone was administered according to the NASCIS III protocol (48 h) together with low molecular weight Heparin and gastroprotected medication. Complete transection of the spinal cord and an anterior haematoma from T11 to T12 were confirmed on X rays, CT's and MRI scans. Posterior surgical stabilisation was performed using Isola instrumentation, starting 8 h post injury. Her post surgical period was uneventful except for some episodes of low blood pressure (85/60 mmHg) from which she had no symptoms. On the 12th post operative day, while in the physiotherapy department, she complained of right scapular pain. This occurred every time she was sat up and was associated with paraesthesia of both upper limbs. Two days later she deteriorated neurologically and her level ascended initially to T8 and then to T3. MRI of the spine with and without gadolinium showed spinal cord oedema between C3 and T1. There was no evidence of haemorrhage or syringomyelia. The authors discussed this case making different hypotheses. They are mainly the following: (1) Gradually ascending ischaemia due to a vascular disorder; (2) Double spinal trauma; (3) Ischaemia related to repeated hypotensive episodes; (4) Low grade intramedullary tumour; and (5) Thrombus of the Radicularis Magna artery. The case has been recognised as being very rare and interesting. In the conclusions, the presenting author stresses the importance of adopting MRI-compatible instrumentation for the surgical stabilisation of the spine, and careful monitoring of blood pressure during the acute phase of spinal cord injury. Dr Aito agrees with Mr El Masry about the opportunity of forming a group of clinicians in order to discuss protocols to cope with this devastating complication.
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PMID:Ascending myelopathy in the early stage of spinal cord injury. 1049 Aug 52

Anterior thoracoscopic interbody stabilization and fusion was performed in 163 patients. Lesions treated were located between T4 and L3, most frequently occurring at T12/ L2. Operative time decreased dramatically as experience was gained with the procedure. 2 patients early in the series successfully were converted to an open procedure. One positioning related pressure harm on the thoracodorsal nerve and one irritation of the L1 root at the entrance site were both transitory. Postoperative control by X-ray and CTscan showed correct positioning of the bone graft, as well as the fixation device in all patients. Our experience with this minimally invasive procedure demonstrated the feasibility of the method. Major advantages compared to the open procedure are reduced morbidity of the approach, postoperative pain reduction, early recovery of function and shortened hospital stay.
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PMID:[Thoracoscopy-guided management of the "anterior column". Methods and results]. 1050 75

Expression of bradykinin receptors was analyzed in freshly isolated dorsal root ganglion neurons of the ipsi- and contralateral segments L4/L5, L2/L3, and T12/T13 two to twenty days after unilateral injury of the adult rat sciatic nerve using gold labeled bradykinin. The number of infiltrating leucocytes was investigated by flow cytometry. Sciatic nerve injury transiently increased the proportion of neurons expressing bradykinin receptors not only in the ipsilateral ganglia L4/L5, but also in the homonymous contralateral ganglia and also bilaterally in the adjacent ganglia L2/L3. Neurons of the ganglia T12/T13 were not affected. The time course of upregulation was different between neurons of the injured nerve and uninjured ones. Furthermore, the proportion of neurons expressing a high density of receptors increased also bilaterally in ganglia L4/L5 and L2/L3. As on the ipsilateral side, the increase in neurons expressing bradykinin receptors in the contralateral homonymous ganglia was due to an induction of the B1 receptor subtype and an upregulation of the B2 subtype. As a possible source for stimulating factors for induction of bradykinin receptors the number of macrophages and lymphocytes was investigated two to twenty days after nerve ligation. No increase was observed prior to day ten and only in ipsilateral ganglia L4/L5, not contralaterally and not in adjacent ganglia L2/L3 and T12/T13. The experiments show that the induction of bradykinin receptors following a unilateral nerve lesion is not restricted to neurons projecting into the damaged nerve but is (i) bilateral, (ii) different in time course between injured and uninjured neurons, and (iii) locally confined to neurons of the adjacent ganglia. Macrophages and lymphocytes are increased after ten day ligation only in the affected ganglia and are probably not involved in the induction of bradykinin receptors.
Pain 1999 Dec
PMID:Spatio-temporal pattern of induction of bradykinin receptors and inflammation in rat dorsal root ganglia after unilateral nerve ligation. 1056 57

Vertebral fractures are the most common osteoporotic fracture and are associated with significant pain and disability. Prior vertebral fracture and low bone mineral density (BMD) are strong predictors of new vertebral fracture. Using data from 6082 women, ages 55-80 years, in the Fracture Intervention Trial (a randomized, placebo-controlled trial of the antiresorptive agent, alendronate), we explored the association of the number of prior vertebral fractures with the risk of new fractures and whether this association is influenced by the spinal location of fractures. The risk of future vertebral fractures increased with the number of prevalent fractures, independently of age and BMD; in the placebo group, more than half of the women with five or more fractures at baseline developed new vertebral fractures, compared to only 3.8% of women without prior vertebral fractures. The magnitude of association with an increased risk of future vertebral fractures was equal for prevalent fractures located in either the "lower" (T12-L4) (relative risk [RR] = 2.9; 95% CI = 1.9, 3.6) or "upper" (T4-10) spine (RR = 2.6; 95% CI = 1.9, 3.6). We found no evidence that the effectiveness of alendronate in reducing the risk of future vertebral fracture was attenuated in women with up to five or more prevalent fractures, or that it varied by the location of prevalent fractures. However, prevalent vertebral fractures in any location were more strongly associated with risk of new fractures in the upper (RR = 5.2; 95% CI = 3.2, 8.3) than in the lower spine (2.3; 1.6, 3.3). In addition, each 1 SD decrease in spinal BMD was associated with a 2.1 (1.7, 2.6) times greater odds of new fracture in the upper spine, compared with 1.5 (1.3, 1.8) for the lower spine. These findings suggest that, in older women, osteoporosis may be a stronger risk factor for new fractures in the upper (vs. lower) thoracolumbar spine, although we found no evidence that the location of prior fractures should influence treatment decisions. Physicians should recognize that prior vertebral fractures are a strong risk factor for future fractures, and consider treating such patients to reduce their risk of subsequent fractures.
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PMID:Association of prevalent vertebral fractures, bone density, and alendronate treatment with incident vertebral fractures: effect of number and spinal location of fractures. The Fracture Intervention Trial Research Group. 1057 84

Intraspinal injection of the AMPA/metabotropic receptor agonist quisqualic acid (QUIS) results in excitotoxic injury which develops pathological characteristics similar to those associated with ischemic and traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) (R. P. Yezierski et al., 1998, Pain 75: 141-155; R. P. Yezierski et al., 1993, J. Neurotrauma 10: 445-456). Since spinal injury can lead to partial or complete deafferentation of ascending supraspinal structures, it is likely that secondary to the disruption of spinal pathways these regions could undergo significant reorganization. Recently, T. J. Morrow et al. (Pain 75: 355-365) showed that autoradiographic estimates of regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) can be used to simultaneously identify alterations in the activation of multiple forebrain structures responsive to noxious formalin stimulation. Accordingly, we examined whether excitotoxic SCI produced alterations in the activation of supraspinal structures using rCBF as a marker of neuronal activity. Twenty-four to 41 days after unilateral injection of QUIS into the T12 to L3 spinal segments, we found significant increases in the activation of 7 of 22 supraspinal structures examined. As compared to controls, unstimulated SCI rats exhibited a significant bilateral increase in rCBF within the arcuate nucleus (ARC), the hindlimb region of S1 cortex (HL), parietal cortex (PAR), and the thalamic posterior (PO), ventral lateral (VL), ventral posterior lateral (VPL), and ventral posterior medial (VPM) nuclei. All structures showing significantly altered rCBF are associated with the processing of somatosensory information. These changes constitute remote responses to injury and suggest that widespread functional changes occur within cortical and subcortical regions following injury to the spinal cord.
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PMID:Chronic, selective forebrain responses to excitotoxic dorsal horn injury. 1068 88


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