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Query: UMLS:C0700208 (
scoliosis
)
8,574
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although split cord malformations have been well documented in children, there is no consensus about their surgical indications and clinical course in adults because of their rarity. Medical records of nine young adult patients with split cord malformations were reviewed retrospectively. The most common complaint was radicular
low back pain
persisting more than 1 year, and the most common finding was hypertrichosis. Adult split cord malformation patients in our series had neither
scoliosis
nor foot deformities. Radiologically, all had low-situated conus medullaris. Eight of them underwent surgery. The radicular
low back pain
decreased in all the surgically treated patients at short-term follow-up but had not disappeared. Although pain originating from split cord malformations seems to be the most common surgical indication in adult patients and shows good short-term results, in our opinion long-term pain improvement is necessary for confirmation. According to our results, it seems that symptomatic young adults with split cord malformations are good candidates for complaint and deficit stabilization surgery.
...
PMID:Split cord malformation in adults. 1461 9
This cross-sectional study was carried out to investigate any correlation between backpack carrying, spinal curvatures, and athletic activities on schoolchildren's dorsal (DP) and
low back pain
(
LBP
). Three thousand four hundred forty-one students aged from 9 to 15 years who carried backpacks to school were included in this study and asked for DP and
LBP
experiences in the school period while carrying the backpack. Nonradiating methods (surface back contour analysis) were used to indirectly measure frontal spinal curve (
scoliosis
) with the scoliometer and lateral curves (thoracic kyphosis and lumbar lordosis) with the kyphometer. All data analyses were undertaken regarding school year level, age, gender, sports participation, backpack weight, and way of carrying (one versus both shoulder) in relation to magnitude of
scoliosis
, thoracic kyphosis, lumbar lordosis, and DP and
LBP
while carrying the backpack. DP increased with increasing backpack weight (P < 0.05). The way (one versus both shoulder) of backpack carrying did not correlate either with DP or with
LBP
. Girls experienced much more
LBP
and DP than boys (P < 0.001). There was no difference in the prevalence of
LBP
and DP between adolescents and children. Students' age, height, and body weight as well as magnitude of kyphosis, lordosis, and
scoliosis
did not correlate with either
LBP
or DP. At the age of 11 years, girls and boys showed the highest prevalence for DP (72% and 38.5%, respectively), while at the age of 14 years, girls reported significantly (P < 0.05) more DP than boys. Girls showed the highest prevalence of
LBP
(71%) at the age of 11 years, while for the boys, it was at the age of 15 years (21%). Girls showed at the age of 11 years significantly more
LBP
(P < 0.05) than boys. Sports exposure seemed to increase
LBP
in girls (P < 0.001). The results of this study suggest a differential DP and
LBP
prevalence in schoolchildren and adolescents carrying backpacks with regard to gender and age. The peak in pain prevalence was immediately before puberty as well as immediately after its onset. Girls who participated in sports activities seem to experience more often DP and
LBP
than boys. Short children who carry backpacks as heavy as do tall children at the same age are more prone to
LBP
.
...
PMID:Correlation between backpack weight and way of carrying, sagittal and frontal spinal curvatures, athletic activity, and dorsal and low back pain in schoolchildren and adolescents. 1473 74
Split spinal cord malformations (SCM) typically present in childhood and rarely in adulthood. Very little is known about the SCMs in the elderly, and the diagnosis can be easily missed. A 73-year-old woman with a childhood history of
scoliosis
and late ambulation milestones presented with a 2-year history of worsening
low back pain
and progressive difficulty walking. She had a mild gait disturbance with 4/5 weakness in left ankle dorsiflexion. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a bifid spinal cord contained in a single thecal sac and a tethered cord with low-lying conus at L3. The patient was taken to the operating room and a soft-tissue median septum, as well as all other adhesions, was removed. The filum terminale was identified, coagulated, and divided. Six weeks later, the patient reported decreased back pain, improvement in ambulation, and markedly decreased used of narcotics for her back and leg pain. Her left ankle dorsiflexion strength improved to 4+/5. This patient had two hemicords encased in a single dural tube separated by a nonrigid, fibrous median septum and an associated tethered cord. Adult presentation of SCM is extremely rare. This case highlights the need to consider split cord malformation and tethered cord in the differential diagnosis not only for adults but also the elderly presenting with back pain,
scoliosis
, and difficulty walking.
...
PMID:Split spinal cord malformation in an elderly patient: case report. 1475 45
We reviewed 41 patients with adolescent idiopathic
scoliosis
treated with spinal fusion and Harrington instrumentation between 1973 and 1992. The mean follow-up was 23 (11-30) years. All patients completed self-administered questionnaires, Oswestry
Low Back Pain
Disability Score (ODS), Roland Morris score (RLS), and Visual Analog Pain Intensity Scale (VAS). We found a high degree of satisfaction with more than three quarters of the patients in work. The outcome of ODS, RLS, and VAS showed low scores. We found a significant correlation between the scores and the Cobb angle preoperatively as well as at follow-up. The patient-oriented outcome did not correlate with the type of curve, extension of vertebral fusion, tilt angle of the lowest instrumented vertebra, postoperative Cobb angle, loss of correction, or lumbar lordosis. This long-term follow-up of Harrington rod fusion for adolescent idiopathic
scoliosis
showed no important impairment of health-related quality of life.
...
PMID:Low back pain after spinal fusion and Harrington instrumentation for idiopathic scoliosis. 1552 99
A 15-year-old girl was admitted to our hospital with severe
low back pain
. She had
scoliosis
dextra and tight hamstrings. A plain radiograph showed high-grade L5 spondylolisthesis with vertebral scalloping from the fourth lumbar to the first sacral vertebra. L5 wide laminectomy and posterior lumbar interbody fusion by iliac bone graft was performed using the Galveston method of sacral fixation and a pedicle screw system. The rod and hook system was used from T9 to the bilateral iliac wing. We added posterolateral fusion from T10 to S1 by autograft and allograft. The patient became pain free and was able to return to student life. Three years after surgery, the radiographs demonstrated good bony fusion; however, careful long-term follow-up is needed.
...
PMID:High-grade L5 spondylolisthesis associated with dural ectasia in neurofibromatosis. 1581 74
Athletes younger than 12 years of age commonly have pathology related to the lower back pain. Spondylolysis is the most common condition in these athletes. Other conditions, including lumbar Scheuermann's disease,
scoliosis
, disc herniation, fractures, and muscular stains, can occur. Most of the mature general population experiences low back at some time in life. Athletes may be at increased risk, but outcomes are good. The majority of
low back pain
in mature athletes is mechanical in nature. Herniated discs,spinal stenosis, sacoilitis, and sacral stress fractures can also cause
low back pain
in these athletes. Low back conditions mentioned above may be treated with rest, specific exercise programs, and medication. Surgery is indicated for severe spinal stenosis, pain with evidence of neurological compromise,and some painful deformities. Newer treatments for back pain are emerging,but few controlled clinical trials are available.
...
PMID:Lower back pain in the athlete: common conditions and treatment. 1583 19
Pelvis and spinal curves were studied with an angular parameter typical of pelvis morphology: pelvic incidence. A significant chain of correlations between positional pelvic and spinal parameters and incidence is known. This study investigated standards of incidence and a predictive equation of lordosis from selective pelvic and spinal individual parameters. One hundred and forty nine (78 men and 71 women) healthy adults, aged 19-50 years, with no spinal disorders, were included and had a full-spine lateral X-ray in a standardised upright position. Computerised technology was used for the measurement of angular parameters. Mean-deviation section of each parameter and Pearson correlation test were calculated. A multivariate selection algorithm was running with the lordosis (predicted variable) and the other spinal and pelvic parameters (predictor variables), to determine the best sets of predictors to include in the model. A low incidence (<44 degrees ) decreased sacral-slope and the lordosis is flattened. A high incidence (>62 degrees ) increased sacral-slope and the lordosis is more pronounced. Lordosis predictive equation is based on incidence, kyphosis, sacral-slope and +/-T9 tilt. The confidence limits and the residuals (the difference between measured and predicted lordosis) assessed the predicted lordosis accuracy of the model: respectively, +/-1.65 and 2.41 degrees with the 4-item model; +/-1.73 and 3.62 degrees with the 3-item model. The ability of the functional spine-pelvis unit to search for a sagittal balance depended both on the incidence and on the variation section of the other positional parameters. Incidence gave an adaptation potential at two levels of positional compensation: overlying state (kyphosis, T9 tilt), underlying state (sacral slope, pelvic tilt). The biomechanical and clinical conditions of the standing posture (as in
scoliosis
,
low back pain
, spondylisthesis, spine surgery, obesity and postural impairments) can be studied by comparing the measured lordosis with the predicted lordosis.
...
PMID:Sagittal alignment of spine and pelvis regulated by pelvic incidence: standard values and prediction of lordosis. 1617 95
Bracing is the most effective non-operative treatment for mild progressive spinal deformities in adolescence but it has shown a considerable impact on several aspects of adolescents' functioning. This cross-sectional study investigated the self-perceived health status of adolescents with the two most common deformities, treated with body orthosis. Seventy-nine adolescents with spinal deformities (idiopathic adolescent
scoliosis
, thoracic Scheuermann kyphosis) and 62 adolescents without spinal deformities were asked to complete the Quality of Life profile for Spine Deformities Instrument. This study showed that adolescents with deformities are significantly less likely to have back pain in training than controls, but more likely to have difficulty in forward bending, and in the most common daily activities while in brace. These individuals claim they wake up because of back pain and feel quite nervous with the external appearance of their body. These patients face often problems with their relations with friends, while they reported difficulties in getting up from bed and sleep at night more often than their counterparts without deformities. As they grow older, patients feel increasing ashamed of their body, as they are more concerned about the future effect of the deformity on their body. As the bracing time increases, patients have much more probability than controls to get
low back pain
. Girls with deformity have a higher probability than boys to get
low back pain
while working in the house and while training. Individuals with larger spinal curvatures have more difficulties in bending and increased incidence of back pain than their counterparts with smaller curvatures. Psychological reasons associated mainly with relations at school and back pain are the main causes for low compliance in adolescents with spinal deformities treated with body orthosis. Careful instructions for all individuals who will undergo brace therapy, psychological support for all patients who develop psychological reactions and physical training particularly for older girls should be recommended to increase bracing compliance.
...
PMID:Comparative multifactorial analysis of the effects of idiopathic adolescent scoliosis and Scheuermann kyphosis on the self-perceived health status of adolescents treated with brace. 1695 47
Chronic
low back pain
(CLBP) is a common and debilitating problem in older adults. Little exists in the literature about primary care physicians' (PCPs') knowledge of and confidence in managing this problem. A self-administered survey was mailed to PCPs in western Pennsylvania to measure knowledge of the evaluation and treatment of common contributors to CLBP in older adults, confidence in diagnosing these contributors through physical examination, and the association between confidence levels and knowledge. The survey combined items with an ordinal scale on which PCPs ranked their confidence in detecting various contributors to CLBP (e.g., fibromyalgia) using physical examination and patient vignettes followed by multiple choice questions designed to assess knowledge. One hundred fifty-three of 634 surveys were returned (24.1%). Overall, the majority of PCPs did not feel "very confident" in their ability to diagnose any of the contributors of CLBP listed (most items <40%). PCPs felt most confident in detecting
scoliosis
and least confident detecting myofascial pain of the piriformis muscle. There was a wide range in the number of respondents answering all questions related to a particular topic correctly (3.9% for sacroiliac joint syndrome to 70.4% for hip osteoarthritis). There was no relationship between knowledge scores and confidence ratings (P > .05 for all comparisons). The results point to a need for more PCP education about CLBP in older adults. It also suggests that accurate needs assessment should not rely on physician confidence ratings alone.
...
PMID:Chronic low back pain in older adults: What physicians know, what they think they know, and what they should be taught. 1708 7
The development of
scoliosis
in boys with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) is a significant, morbid event in the progression of the disease caused by progressive spinal musculature weakness. As an alternative to muscle activity, the spine can also be stabilised by locking the articular facet joints, which is achieved when the body is supported on a seat tilted anteriorly using a 'wedge', of the kind commonly recommended for
low back pain
. We tested spinal stability when using a seat tilted 15 degrees anteriorly in eight boys with DMD, without significant
scoliosis
, by measuring the ability to support a lateral load applied to the thorax through a sling and hawser. All eight boys tolerated lateral loading better with wedged seating and were able to support an average additional load of 95 g per kilogram of body weight compared to normal seating. Lateral load bearing was improved in 10 normal control boys by an average of 40 g per kilogram of body weight. These encouraging pilot findings indicate that there is a need for further studies on the effectiveness of passive mechanical factors in spinal stabilisation to delay the development of
scoliosis
in boys with DMD.
...
PMID:Spinal stability is improved by inducing a lumbar lordosis in boys with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy: a pilot study. 1809 90
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