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Query: UMLS:C0700208 (scoliosis)
8,574 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Tethering of the spinal cord can occur from a thickened filum terminale, scarring due to myelomeningocele repair, lipomas or diastematomyelia. The typical presentation is a lumbar cutaneous defect, enuresis, unexplained back or leg pain, foot deformities, leg length discrepancies or scoliosis. Spinal ultrasound in neonates and MRI in older children offers ready diagnosis. With laser and microneurosurgical techniques, repair of these defects is safe and effective. The authors recommend that any infant having a mid-line lumbar cutaneous abnormality, such as a hemangioma, lipoma, hair patch or dimple, be evaluated to rule out tethering of the spinal cord.
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PMID:Diagnosis and management of the tethered cord syndrome. 128 83

Defects in proprioceptive postural control have been linked to the etiology of idiopathic scoliosis. In particular, a rearrangement of the internal representation of the body has been proposed in these cases. In this study, upper-extremity proprioceptive accuracy was compared among the following groups: 1) patients with idiopathic scoliosis (n = 25); 2) subjects with nonprogressive spinal asymmetry detected by screening in school (n = 23); 3) subjects undergoing behavioral training for nocturnal enuresis (n = 17); and 4) normal subjects (n = 134). A significant inaccuracy was found among the right-handed subjects of the scoliosis and spinal asymmetry groups as compared to the normal group. It is postulated that proprioceptive dysfunction, or borderline function, is a causative factor of spinal asymmetry, which is often observed in early adolescence and which in some cases may be progressive.
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PMID:Proprioceptive accuracy in idiopathic scoliosis. 155 85

The nutrition pattern and disease incidence were studied in 9634 schoolchildren with varying body lengths. A direct correlation was established between the body length and energy value of nutrition, the content of basic food, macroelements and trace elements, vitamins A and B. Tall schoolchildren were shown to have a greater incidence of obesity, chronic tonsilitis, rheumatic fever, enuresis, abnormal posture and scoliosis. The biogeochemical provinces with endemic fluorosis and goiter were disclosed to have the increased number of children below medium height and of low height, which is accounted for by the deficient content of fluorine and iodine in the environment.
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PMID:[Essential nutrition and health status indices of schoolchildren of various heights]. 709 Mar 22

Patients with cerebral palsy are prompted to seek urological evaluation when urinary tract infection, socially unacceptable incontinence or hematuria occurs. We attempted to determine the prevalence of urinary tract structural changes by prospectively screening on sonography the kidneys and bladder of 90 patients 1 to 25 years old (mean age 8 years) who had cerebral palsy with or without urological symptoms. Uncooperative patients or those who would require sedation were excluded. Of the patients 66 were incontinent and used diapers, 18 were completely dry and 6 had nocturnal enuresis with daytime dryness. Sonographic abnormalities were detected in 7 patients, including renal size discrepancy in 2 (1 with severe scoliosis and 1 with a history of renal artery thrombosis), mild to moderate hydronephrosis with thickened bladders suggestive of neurogenic bladder dysfunction in 3 and a nonvisualized kidney in 2. However, repeat sonography confirmed 2 normal kidneys in the latter patients. Thus, urinary tract abnormalities were detected unexpectedly in 2% of patients studied. This relatively low proportion suggests that routine urinary tract screening in cerebral palsy patients may not be warranted.
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PMID:Is urinary tract screening necessary for patients with cerebral palsy? 793 10

It is well known that vertebral schisis is frequent in enuretic children but the true incidence in the normal population is not clear, because all series published are referred to children with associated urinary anomalies, who were submitted to voiding cystography and or intravenous pyelography. This determine a statistical bias. The aim of our study was to compare the prevalence of vertebral schisis in enuretic children and in the general pediatric population. Therefore, we chose 142 enuretic children without associated urological or neurological anomalies and a control group of 152 children, assumed as general population, who were submitted to spinal X-rays during screening for scoliosis or congenital dysplasia of the hip. Vertebral schisis was found in 65% (93/142) of enuretics and in 18% (28/152) of control group children. Maximum association between enuresis and vertebral schisis was found in primary monosymptomatic nocturnal enuresis (82%), while minimum association was found in children with secondary enuresis (57%). The difference in percentage of association enuresis-schisis was statistically significant between enuretics and control group and between primary monosymptomatic and secondary enuresis (p < 0.001). The results of this paper are simply add knowledges on the prevalence of the sacral schisis in enuretic children. But, to speculate the different prevalence in different types of enuresis, the results should confirm that the phenomenon of enuresis is multifactorial and the primary monosymptomatic and secondary enuresis have different etiological factor.
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PMID:[Vertebral schisis in enuretic children: preliminary results of a statistical analysis]. 959 85