212 research outputs found

    The effect of aging on cervical parameters in a normative North American population

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    Study Design: Retrospective cohort study. Objectives: To investigate age-based changes in cervical alignment parameters in an asymptomatic population. Methods: Retrospective review of a prospective study of 118 asymptomatic subjects who underwent biplanar imaging with 3-dimensional capabilities. Demographic and health-related quality of life data was collected prior to imaging. Patients were stratified into 5 age groups: &lt;35 years, 35-44 years, 45-54 years, 55-64 years, and ≥65 years. Radiographic measurements of the cervical spine and spinopelvic parameters were compared between age groups. The normal distribution of parameters was assessed followed by analysis of variance for comparison of variance between age groups. Results: C2-C7 lordosis, C0-C7 lordosis, and T1 slope demonstrated significant increases with age. C0-C7 lordosis was significantly less in subjects &lt;35 years compared with ≥55 years. Significant differences in T1 slope were identified in patients &lt;35 versus ≥65, 35-44 versus ≥65, and 45-54 versus ≥65 years. T1 slope demonstrated a positive correlation with age. Horizontal gaze parameters did not change linearly with age and mean averages of all age groups were within 10° of one another. Cervical kyphosis was present in approximately half of subjects who were &lt;55 compared with approximately 10% of subjects ≥55 years. Differences in pelvic tilt, pelvic incidence-lumbar lordosis, and C7-S1 sagittal vertical axis were identified with age. Conclusions: C0-C7 lordosis, C2-C7 lordosis, and T1 slope demonstrate age-based changes while other cervical and horizontal gaze parameters remain relatively constant with age. </jats:sec

    A new invariant characterizing the postural alignment of young healthy adults

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    Introduction and objectives : postural trouble can have a negative impact on skeleton disorders for aging adults. The first step is understanding these aging postural troubles is to observe and quantify the erected posture of young healthy adult’s skeletons from radigraphies. However, posture studies in the literature focused on the alignment of the spine and pelvis segments [1], rarely including the head neither the lower limbs. Our studies aims to describe the postural alignment of young asymptomatic subjects from head to feet from bi-planar standing radiographies

    Radiographic Outcomes of Adult Spinal Deformity Correction : A Critical Analysis of Variability and Failures Across Deformity Patterns

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    Study Design: Multicenter, prospective, consecutive, surgical case series from the International Spine Study Group. Objectives: To evaluate the effectiveness of surgical treatment in restoring spinopelvic (SP) alignment. Summary of Background Data: Pain and disability in the setting of adult spinal deformity have been correlated with global coronal alignment (GCA), sagittal vertical axis (SVA), pelvic incidence/lumbar lordosis mismatch (PI-LL), and pelvic tilt (PT). One of the main goals of surgery for adult spinal deformity is to correct these parameters to restore harmonious SP alignment. Methods: Inclusion criteria were operative patients (age greater than 18 years) with baseline (BL) and 1-year full-length X-rays. Thoracic and thoracolumbar Cobb angle and previous mentioned parameters were calculated. Each parameter at BL and 1 year was categorized as either pathological or normal. Pathologic limits were: Cobb greater than 30 , GCA greater than 40 mm, SVA greater than 40 mm, PI-LL greater than 10 , and PT greater than 20 . According to thresholds, corrected or worsened alignment groups of patients were identified and overall radiographic effectiveness of procedure was evaluated by combining the results from the coronal and sagittal planes. Fondation Paristech, ISS

    Reliable femoral frame construction based on MRI dedicated to muscles position follow-up.

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    In vivo follow-up of muscle shape variation represents a challenge when evaluating muscle development due to disease or treatment. Recent developments in muscles reconstruction techniques indicate MRI as a clinical tool for the follow-up of the thigh muscles. The comparison of 3D muscles shape from two different sequences is not easy because there is no common frame. This study proposes an innovative method for the reconstruction of a reliable femoral frame based on the femoral head and both condyles centers. In order to robustify the definition of condylar spheres, an original method was developed to combine the estimation of diameters of both condyles from the lateral antero-posterior distance and the estimation of the spheres center from an optimization process. The influence of spacing between MR slices and of origin positions was studied. For all axes, the proposed method presented an angular error lower than 1° with spacing between slice of 10 mm and the optimal position of the origin was identified at 56 % of the distance between the femoral head center and the barycenter of both condyles. The high reliability of this method provides a robust frame for clinical follow-up based on MRI

    Clinical and stereoradiographic analysis of adult spinal deformity with and without rotatory subluxation

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    Introduction: In degenerative adult spinal deformity (ASD), sagittal malalignment and rotatory sublux-ation (RS) correlate with clinical symptomatology. RS is defined as axial rotation with lateral listhesis.Stereoradiography, recently developed for medical applications, provides full-body standing radiographsand 3D reconstruction of the spine, with low radiation dose.Hypothesis: 3D stereoradiography improves analysis of RS and of its relations with transverse plane andspinopelvic parameters and clinical impact.Material and methods: One hundred and thirty adults with lumbar ASD and full-spine EOS®radiographs(EOS Imaging, Paris, France) were included. Spinopelvic sagittal parameters and lateral listhesis in thecoronal plane were measured. The transverse plane study parameters were: apical axial vertebral rotation(apex AVR), axial intervertebral rotation (AIR) and torsion index (TI). Two groups were compared: with RS(lateral listhesis > 5 mm) and without RS (without lateral listhesis exceeding 5 mm: non-RS). Correlationsbetween radiologic and clinical data were assessed.Results: RS patients were significantly older, with larger Cobb angle (37.4◦vs. 26.6◦, P = 0.0001), moresevere sagittal deformity, and greater apex AVR and TI (respectively: 22.9◦vs. 11.3◦, P 10◦without visible RS on 2D radiographs. RS patientsreported significantly more frequent low back pain and radiculalgia.Discussion: In this EOS®study, ASD patients with RS had greater coronal curvature and sagittal and trans-verse deformity, as well as greater pain. Further transverse plane analysis could allow earlier diagnosisand prognosis to guide management.Level of evidence: 4, retrospective study.Master’s grant from the French Orthopedic and Traumatologic Surgery Society (SOFCOT), without which this research would not have been possible

    Is There a Patient Profile That Characterizes a Patient With Adult Spinal Deformity as a Candidate for Minimally Invasive Surgery?

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    Study designRetrospective review.ObjectivesThe goal of this study was to evaluate the baseline characteristics of patients chosen to undergo traditional open versus minimally invasive surgery (MIS) for adult spinal deformity (ASD).MethodsA multicenter review of 2 databases including ASD patients treated with surgery. Inclusion criteria were age &gt;45 years, Cobb angle minimum of 20°, and minimum 2-year follow-up. Preoperative radiographic parameters and disability outcome measures were reviewed.ResultsA total of 350 patients were identified: 173 OPEN patients and 177 MIS. OPEN patients were significantly younger than MIS patients (61.5 years vs 63.74 years, P = .013). The OPEN group had significantly more females (87% vs 76%, P = .006), but both groups had similar body mass index. Preoperative lumbar Cobb was significantly higher for the OPEN group (34.2°) than for the MIS group (26.0°, P &lt; .001). The mean preoperative Oswestry Disability Index was significantly higher in the MIS group (44.8 in OPEN patients and 49.8 in MIS patients, P &lt; .011). The preoperative Numerical Rating Scale value for back pain was 7.2 in the OPEN group and 6.8 in the MIS group preoperatively, P = .100.ConclusionsPatients chosen for MIS for ASD are slightly older and have smaller coronal deformities than those chosen for open techniques, but they did not have a substantially lesser degree of sagittal malalignment. MIS surgery was most frequently utilized for patients with an sagittal vertical axis under 6 cm and a baseline pelvic incidence and lumbar lordosis mismatch under 30°

    A new quasi-invariant parameter characterizing the postural alignment of young asymptomatic adults

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    Purpose Our study aims to describe the postural alignment of young asymptomatic subjects from head to feet from bi-planar standing full-body X-rays, providing database to compare to aging adults. Novelty resides in the inclusion of the head and lower limbs in the erected posture’s analysis. Methods For 69 young asymptomatic subjects (18–40 years old) 3D reconstructions of the head, spine, pelvis and lower limbs segments were performed from biplanar full-body X-rays. Usual studied spinal, pelvic and lower limbs’ parameters were computed in 3D, sagittal and frontal planes of the patient. Relationships between these parameters were investigated. Inclinations of different lines were studied to characterize the erected posture. Results Values found for spinal curvatures, pelvic parameters and lower limbs geometrical parameters agreed with the literature: thoracic kyphosis, lumbar lordosis, pelvic incidence, pelvic tilt and sagittal vertical axis were respectively in average of 26.9 (SD 7.2 ), 30.5 (SD 7.5 ), 51.0 (SD 9.4 ), 11.1 (SD 5.6 ) and -8.9 mm (SD 21.6 mm). The angle between the vertical and the line joining the most superior point of dentiform apophyse of C2 (OD) and the center of the bi-coxofemoral axis (HA) was the less variable one (SD 1.6 ). Conclusions This study on 3D postural alignment reports the geometry of the spine, pelvis and lower limbs, of the young asymptomatic adult. The less variable angle is the one of the line OD–HA with the vertical, highlighting the vertical alignment of the head above the pelvis. This study provides a basis for future comparisons when investigating aging populations.Authors thank the ParisTech BiomecAM chair program on subject-specific musculoskeletal modeling, and in particular COVEA and Société Générale
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