Neck retractions, cervical
root decompression, and radicular pain.
Abdulwahab SS, Sabbahi M
1: J Orthop Sports Phys Ther
2000 Jan;30(1):4-9; discussion 10-2
Texas Woman's University,
School of Physical Therapy, Houston 77030-2897, USA.
STUDY DESIGN: Two-group
repeated measures. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the changes in the
flexor carpi radialis H reflex after reading and neck
retraction exercises and to correlate reflex changes with the
intensity of radicular pain.
BACKGROUND: Repeated neck
retraction movements have been routinely prescribed for
patients with neck pain. METHODS AND MEASURES: Ten nonimpaired
subjects (mean age, 27 +/- 4 years) and 13 patients (mean age,
35 +/- 9 years) with C7 radiculopathy volunteered for the
study. The flexor carpi radialis H reflex was elicited by
electrical stimulation of the median nerve at the cubital
fossa before and after 20 minutes of reading and after 20
repetitive neck retractions.
Subjective intensity of the
radicular pain was reported before and after each condition
using an analog scale. RESULTS: For patients with
radiculopathy, a repeated-measures analysis of variance showed
a significant decrease in the H reflex amplitude (from 0.81
+/- 0.4 to 0.69 +/- 0.39 mV), an increase in radicular
symptoms after reading (from 4.2 +/- 1.3 to 5.6 +/- 1.4 on the
visual analog scale), an increase in the H reflex amplitude
(from 0.69 +/- 0.39 to 1.01 +/- 0.49 mV), and a decrease in
pain intensity (from 5.6 +/- 1.4 to 1.5 +/- 1.3) after
repeated neck retractions. There was an association between
cervical root compression (smaller H reflexes) and increased
pain during reading and between cervical root decompression
(larger H reflex) and reduced pain (r = -0.86 to -0.60).
Exacerbation of symptoms was found with a reading posture.
There were no significant changes in the H reflex amplitude in
the nonimpaired group. No
changes were found in reflex
latency for either groups. CONCLUSIONS: Neck retractions
appeared to alter H reflex amplitude. These exercises might
promote cervical root decompression and reduce radicular pain
in patients with C7 radiculopathy. The opposite effect (an
exacerbation of symptoms) was found with the reading posture.
PMID: 10705591, UI: 20169769
EMG
support of breig
@@1: Spine 1999 Jan
15;24(2):137-41
Cervical root compression
monitoring by flexor carpi radialis H-reflex in
healthy subjects.
Sabbahi M, Abdulwahab S
School of Physical Therapy,
Texas Woman's University, Houston, USA.
STUDY DESIGN: One-group,
pretest-postest experimental research with repeated
measures. OBJECTIVE: To
determine the effect of head postural modification on
the flexor carpi radialis
H-reflex in healthy subjects. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND
DATA: H-reflex testing has
been reported to be useful in evaluating and treating
patients with lumbosacral and
cervical radiculopathy. The idea behind this
technique is that postural
modification can cause further H-reflex inhibition,
indicating more compression of
the impinged nerve root, or recovery, indicating
decompression of the root.
Such assumptions cannot be supported unless the
influence of normal head
postural modification on the H-reflex in healthy
subjects is studied. METHODS:
Twenty-two healthy subjects participated in this
study (14 men, 8 women; mean
age, 39 +/- 9 years). The median nerve of the
subjects at the cubital fossa
was electrically stimulated (0.5 msec; 0.2 pulses
per second [pps] at H-max),
whereas the flexor carpi radialis muscle H-reflex
was recorded by
electromyography. The H-reflexes were recorded after the
subject
randomly maintained the end
range of head-forward flexion, backward extension,
rotation to the right and the
left, lateral bending to the right and the left,
retraction and protraction.
These were compared with the H-reflex recorded
during comfortable neutral
positions. Data were recorded after the subject
maintained the position for 30
seconds, to avoid the effect of dynamic postural
modification on the H-reflex.
Four traces were recorded in each position. During
recording, the H-reflex was
monitored by the M-response to avoid any changes in
the stimulation-recording
condition. RESULTS: Repeated multivariate analysis of
variance was used to evaluate
the significance of the difference among the
H-reflex, amplitude, and
latency, in various head positions. The H-reflex
amplitude showed statistically
significant changes (P < 0.001) with head
postural modification. All
head positions, except flexion, facilitated the
H-reflex. Extension, lateral
bending, and rotation toward the side of the
recording produced higher
reflex facilitation than the other positions. These
results indicate that H-reflex
changes may be caused by spinal root
compression-decompression
mechanisms. It may also indicate that relative spinal
root decompression occurs in
most head-neck postures except forward flexion.
CONCLUSIONS: Head postural
modification significantly influences the H-reflex
amplitude but not the latency.
This indicates that the H-reflex is a more
sensitive predictor of normal
physiologic changes than are latencies. The
H-reflex modulation in various
head positions may be-caused by relative spinal
root compression-decompression
mechanisms.
PMID: 9926383, UI: 99125206
Surgical treatment of cervical
spondylotic myelopathy: time for a controlled trial.
Rowland LP
Neurology 1992 Jan;42(1):5-13
Neurological Institute,
Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, New York, NY 10032-3784.
Surgical procedures on the
cervical spine are accepted therapies for the myelopathy of
cervical
spondylosis. However, reported
improvement rates vary widely, and many reports indicate
improvement in about one-half
of the cases. It has not been proven that outcome after
surgery is
better than the natural
history or conservative therapy. Radiographic or imaging
evidence of cord
impingement or compression may
be seen in asymptomatic people. There are no clear guides to
the selection of patients who
may benefit from the operation and there has been no
standardization of
preoperative evaluation, trials of conservative therapy,
ascertainment of
progressive disability, or
assessment of outcome. A multicenter controlled trial might
answer
these questions.
Analysis of the cervical spine
alignment following laminoplasty and laminectomy.
Matsunaga S, Sakou T, Nakanisi
K
Spinal Cord 1999
Jan;37(1):20-4
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Kagoshima University,
Sakuragaoka,
Japan.
Very little detailed
biomechanical examination of the alignment of the cervical
spine following
laminoplasty has been
reported. We performed a comparative study regarding the
buckling-type
alignment that follows
laminoplasty and laminectomy to know the mechanical changes in
the
alignment of the cervical
spine. Lateral images of plain roentgenograms of the cervical
spine were
put into a computer and
examined using a program we developed for analysis of the
buckling-type alignment.
Sixty-four patients who underwent laminoplasty and 37 patients
who
underwent laminectomy were
reviewed retrospectively. The subjects comprised patients with
cervical spondylotic
myelopathy (CSM) and those with ossification of the posterior
longitudinal
ligament (OPLL). The
postoperative observation period was 6 years and 7 months on
average
after laminectomy, and 5
years and 6 months on average following laminoplasty.
Development of
the buckling-type alignment
was found in 33% of patients following laminectomy and only 6%
after laminoplasty.
Development of buckling-type alignment following laminoplasty
appeared
markedly less than following
laminectomy in both CSM and OPLL patients. These results favor
laminoplasty over
laminectomy from the aspect of mechanics.
Atrophy of the nuchal muscle
and change in cervical curvature after expansive open-door
laminoplasty.
Fujimura Y, Nishi Y
Arch Orthop Trauma Surg
1996;115(3-4):203-5
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, School of Medicine, Keio University, Tokyo, Japan.
We analyzed computed
tomography (CT) images and plain X-ray films of 53 patients
who had
undergone expansive open-door
laminoplasty, in a 3-year study. The relationship between the
postoperative changes in the
nuchal muscles and those in the cervical curvature was
investigated.
On postoperative CT images,
the cross-sectional area of all nuchal muscles was reduced to
approximately 80% of its
preoperative size. This atrophic change was especially intense
in the
multifidus muscle and the
semispinalis cervicis muscle. Postoperative cross-sectional
area of the
deep nuchal muscles was
reduced approximately 30% from its preoperative size. No
significant
correlation was found between
the all cross-sectional area of the nuchal muscles and the
cervical
curvature. However, a weak
correlation was found between the deep nuchal muscles area and
the curve index (correlation
coefficient 0.29).
support of breig
Lordotic alignment and
posterior migration of the spinal cord following en bloc
open-door laminoplasty for cervical myelopathy: a magnetic
resonance imaging study.
Baba H, Uchida K, Maezawa Y,
Furusawa N, Azuchi M, Imura S
J Neurol 1996
Sep;243(9):626-32
We investigated lordotic
alignment and posterior migration of the spinal cord following
en bloc
open-door laminoplasty for
cervical myelopathy. Fifty-five patients (32 men and 23 women)
were studied, with an average
follow-up of 2.4 years. Radiological examination included
evaluation of lordosis of the
cervical spine and spinal cord, degree of enlargement of bony
spinal
canal, and the magnitude of
posterior cord migration. We also correlated these changes
with
neurological improvement.
Postoperatively, there was an average of 5% loss of cervical
spine
lordosis (P > 0.01) on
radiographs and 12% reduction in the lordotic alignment of the
spinal cord
(P > 0.05) on magnetic
resonance imaging. Postoperatively, the size of the bony
spinal canal
increased by 48%. Posterior
cord migration showed a significant correlation with the
preoperative cervical spine
and spinal cord lordosis (P < 0.05). Thirty-seven (67%)
patients with
neurological improvement
exceeding 50% showed significant posterior cord migration
following
laminoplasty compared with
those demonstrating less than 50% improvement (P = 0.01). Our
results suggest that a
significant neurological improvement is associated with
posterior cord
migration after cervical
laminoplasty.
PMID:
8892062, UI: 97047142
Multilevel cervical
spondylosis. Laminoplasty versus anterior decompression.
Hirabayashi K, Bohlman HH
Spine 1995 Aug 1;20(15):1732-4
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, School of Medicine, Keio University, Tokyo, Japan.
Poor overall outcome and a
high incidence of postoperative kyphosis and progressive
myelopathy have driven
surgeons away from decompressive laminectomy as a treatment
for
multilevel cervical
spondylosis. Dr. Henry Bohlman advocates anterior
decompression and fusion
as the best approach to the
pathophysiology of this disorder, while Dr. Kiyoshi
Hirabayashi
believes that laminoplasty
represents an excellent strategy for patients with
degenerative disease,
as well as those with
ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament.
Preoperative and postoperative
magnetic resonance image evaluations of the spinal cord in
cervical myelopathy.
Yone K, Sakou T, Yanase M,
Ijiri K
Spine 1992 Oct;17(10 Suppl):S388-92
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Kagoshima University, Japan.
To evaluate the morphologic
changes of the spinal cord in patients with cervical
myelopathy due
to cervical spondylosis and
ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament, the
authors
measured the thickness and
signal intensity of the cervical cord with magnetic resonance
imaging
in healthy adults and patients
with cervical myelopathy, and compared these findings. In
patients
with cervical myelopathy, the
preoperative and postoperative magnetic resonance imaging
findings were compared with
the severity of myelopathy and postoperative results. In
healthy
adults, the anteroposterior
diameter of the cervical cord was 7.8 mm at the C3 level and
decreased at lower levels. In
the patients with cervical myelopathy, the preoperative spinal
anteroposterior diameter was
significantly reduced at various levels corresponding to the
stenosis
site within the vertebral
canal. In the group with ossification of the posterior
longitudinal ligament,
the minimal anteroposterior
diameter of the cervical cord tended to decrease with
increasing
severity of myelopathy.
However no relationship was observed between the two
parameters in
the cervical spondylotic
myelopathy group. In the group with ossification of the
posterior
longitudinal ligament,
surgical results were good when the postoperative
anteroposterior diameter
was increased, whereas in the
cervical spondylotic myelopathy group there was no
relationship
between the two parameters. In
the patients with myelopathy, a high intensity area was
observed
in about 40% of all patients
before operation and about 30% after operation. However, the
presence or absence of a
high intensity area did not correlate with the severity of
myelopathy or
with surgical results in the
group with ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament
and the
cervical spondylotic
myelopathy groups.
PMID:
1440032, UI: 93068549
Neck and shoulder pain after
laminoplasty. A noticeable complication.
Hosono N, Yonenobu K, Ono K
Spine 1996 Sep
1;21(17):1969-73
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, Japan.
STUDY DESIGN: The authors
retrospectively analyzed the prevalence and features of neck
and
shoulder pain (axial symptoms)
after anterior interbody fusion and laminoplasty in patients
with
cervical spondylotic
myelopathy. OBJECTIVES: To reveal the difference in prevalence
of
postoperative axial symptoms
between anterior interbody fusion and laminoplasty and to
clarify
the pathogenesis of axial
symptoms after laminoplasty. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND
DATA: Outcome of the cervical
surgery is evaluated on neurologic status alone; axial
symptoms
after laminoplasty rarely have
been investigated. Such symptoms, however, are often severe
enough to interfere with a
person's daily activity. METHODS: Ninety-eight patients had
surgery
for their disability secondary
to cervical spondylotic myelopathy. Of those patients, 72 had
laminoplasty, and 26 had
anterior interbody fusion. The presence or absence of axial
symptoms
was investigated before and
after surgery. The duration, severity, and laterality of
symptoms were
also recorded. RESULTS: The
prevalence of postoperative axial symptoms was significantly
higher after laminoplasty than
after anterior fusion (60% vs. 19%; P < 0.05). In 18 patients
(25%) from the laminoplasty
group, the chief complaints after surgery were related to
axial
symptoms for more than 3
months, whereas in the anterior fusion group, no patient
reported
having such severe pain after
surgery. CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence and severity of axial
symptoms after laminoplasty
proved to be higher and more serious than has been believed.
Such
symptoms should be
considered in the evaluation of the outcome of cervical spinal
surgery.
Related Articles, Books,
LinkOut
Postural imbalance and
vibratory sensitivity in patients with idiopathic scoliosis:
implications for treatment.
Byl NN, Holland S, Jurek A, Hu
SS
J Orthop Sports Phys Ther
1997 Aug;26(2):60-8
University of California, San
Francisco, USA.
Sporadic research reports of
decreased proprioception and balance problems have been
reported in subjects with
idiopathic scoliosis, yet these sensory motor deficits have
not been
addressed in conservative
clinical management programs. The purpose of this study was to
compare both balance reactions
and vibratory sensitivity (as an estimate of proprioception)
in
patients with idiopathic
scoliosis (N = 24) and age-matched controls (N = 24). Balance
was
measured by the ability to
pass a series of simple static and complex sensory-challenged
balance
tasks. Vibratory thresholds
were measured with the Bio-Thesiometer at the cervical spine,
wrist,
and foot. Compared with
age-matched controls, regardless of curve severity or spinal
fusion, the
subjects with idiopathic
scoliosis had similar simple static balance responses when the
somatosensory system was
stable (with or without vision or head turning), but they were
significantly more likely to
fail the complex, sensory-challenged balance tasks when the
somatosensory system was
challenged by an unstable position of the feet, particularly
when the
eyes were closed. The
vibratory thresholds were similar in subjects with scoliosis
and their
age-matched controls, but
individuals with moderate to severe scoliosis (> 25 degrees)
had
significantly higher vibratory
thresholds than those with mild curves. These findings suggest
there
may be problems with postural
righting in patients with idiopathic scoliosis, particularly
when the
balance task challenges the
vestibular pathways. Although vibration sensitivity did not
distinguish
normal healthy individuals
from individuals with idiopathic scoliosis, those with more
severe
scoliotic curves appear to
have a high threshold to vibration. These balance and
vibratory
differences could either be
interpreted as etiologic risk factors or as consequences of
spinal
asymmetry. In either case,
given that curves can continue to progress even into the adult
years,
improving the ability to
right the body with gravity could help maintain the balance of
the spine
despite structural asymmetry.
PMID:
9243403, UI: 97387370
Kinematics of cervical spine
injury. A functional radiological hypothesis.
Penning L
Eur Spine J 1995;4(2):126-32
Department of Diagnostic
Radiology, University Hospital of Groningen AZG, The
Netherlands.
This paper, based on
functional radiological knowledge of normal cervical spine
kinematics,
develops the hypothesis
that compressive vertebral injury can be produced by abrupt
reversal of
curve between hyperflexed and
hyperextended parts of the cervical spine. Reversal of curve
occurs when the main vector of
a compressive force passes between two centers of
flexion-extension motion.
The hypothesis more clearly explains reverse dislocation of
fractured
vertebrae than the current
concept of Whitley and Forsyth of motion of the head through
an arc.
The mechanism of injuries with
characteristics of hyperflexion of one segment and
hyperextension
of an adjacent segment, e.g.,
in certain types of hangman's fractures, is better understood.
The
hypothesis is expected to be
helpful in guiding experimental cervical spine injury, as it
relates
direction of force to level
and type of the resulting vertebral injury.
PMID:
7600151, UI: 95323521
support of breig
1: J Orthop Sports Phys Ther
1993 Mar;17(3):155-60
Reliability of measuring
forward head posture in a clinical setting.
Garrett TR, Youdas JW, Madson
TJ
Physical Therapy Program, Mayo
School of Health-Related Sciences, Rochester, MN.
We believe there is a need to
identify a practical method for determining
objective measurement of
forward head posture. In our study, we determined the
within-tester and
between-tester reliabilities for clinical measurements of
static, sitting, forward head
posture using the cervical range of motion (CROM)
instrument. Repeated
measurements were made using a standardized protocol on 40
patients seated in a
standardized position. The seven testers had from 1 to 8
years of clinical experience.
All measurements were recorded by the same
investigator. The intraclass
correlation coefficient (ICC[1,1]) was used to
quantitate within-tester and
between-tester reliability. Measurements of forward
head position performed by the
same physical therapist had high reliability (ICC
= 0.93). Good reliability (ICC
= 0.83) was demonstrated when different physical
therapists measured the
forward head posture of the same patient. We concluded
that measurements of forward
head posture made by physical therapists trained in
the correct use of the CROM
instrument are reliable. This reliability is
important for determining the
effectiveness of treatment programs. On the basis
of our data, the CROM
instrument will assist clinicians in the objective
evaluation and reassessment of
the patient population demonstrating forward head
posture.
PMID: 8472080, UI: 93230304
1: Spine 1998 Apr
15;23(8):921-7
The correlation between
surface measurement of head and neck posture and the
anatomic position of the upper
cervical vertebrae.
Johnson GM
School of Physiotherapy,
University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
STUDY DESIGN: Repeated
measurements were made of surface postural angles
registering the relative
positions of the head and neck in photographs and of
angles of the upper cervical
vertebrae recorded in lateral cephalometric
radiographs in the same
subjects. For all registrations, subjects assumed the
natural head rest position.
OBJECTIVES: To examine the correlation between
external measurement of head
and neck posture and the anatomic positions of the
upper four cervical vertebrae.
SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Interpretation of
surface cervical posture
measurement is confounded by lack of knowledge about
the extent of the underlying
compensatory adjustments among the upper cervical
vertebrae that may accompany
variation in head and neck posture. The correlation
between surface measurement
and postural characteristics of the upper cervical
spine has not been reported to
date. METHODS: The association between a set of
angles describing the anatomic
position of the four upper cervical vertebrae on
lateral cephalometric
radiographs and a surface measurement of head and neck
posture, the craniovertebral
angle, was studied in 34 young adult women aged
between 17.2 and 30.5 years,
mean age, 24.5 years. Anatomic positions of the
upper four cervical vertebrae
were expressed by angles relative to the true
vertical or horizontal.
Surface angles registering head and neck position for
each subject were obtained
from photographs recorded on two occasions. RESULTS:
No strong correlation could be
established between the angles taken from the
lateral cephalometric
radiographs measuring the extent of upper cervical
lordosis, orientation of the
atlas, vertebral inclination, or odontoid process
tilt and surface angles
recording head and neck position. This finding was
attributed principally to the
much greater positional variability demonstrated
within the upper cervical
spine when compared with the surface measurements of
head and neck position.
CONCLUSION: Anatomic alignment of the upper cervical
vertebrae cannot be inferred
from variation in surface measurement of head and
neck posture. This is the case
even in those people identified with more extreme
head and neck postural
tendencies.
PMID: 9580960, UI: 98242061
1: Spine 1996 Nov
1;21(21):2435-42
The effect of initial head
position on active cervical axial rotation range of
motion in two age populations.
Walmsley RP, Kimber P, Culham
E
School of Rehabilitation
Therapy, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
STUDY DESIGN: This study
analyzed cervical axial rotation initiated from five
different starting positions
in asymptomatic subjects. The results were analyzed
to ascertain if rationale for
certain clinical assessment methods could be
justified. SUMMARY OF
BACKGROUND DATA: In the assessment of the cervical spine,
many clinicians use assessment
techniques that propose to isolate anatomic
structures by using various
permutations and combinations of the three gross
rotational movements, for
example, evaluation of axial rotation in flexion and
extension. OBJECTIVES: The
primary purpose of this study was to compare the
magnitude of cervical axial
rotation when started from neutral, flexion,
extension, protraction, and
retraction, and the protraction-retraction range of
motion also was determined.
METHODS: Two groups of 30 subjects, one group aged
18-30 years and the other
group aged 50-65 years and stratified by gender,
participated in the study. The
3Space Tracker system (Polhemus, A Kaiser
Aero-space and Electronics,
Co., Colchester, VT), art electromagnetic tracking
device, was used to determine
the angular and linear position of the head
relative to the sternum by
detecting the position and orientation of two sensors
attached to the forehead and
sternum. RESULTS: Analysis of variance of the data
revealed a statistically
significant difference (p < 0.05) in axial rotation
between all of the five
starting positions. The younger age group demonstrated
greater range of motion when
rotation was initiated from neutral and extension,
whereas the older group had
greater range when the motion was initiated from
protraction, retraction, and
flexion. CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest that
varying the starting sagittal
head position may affect the anatomic structures
involved in restraining axial
rotation. This supports the clinical approach to
range of motion assessment in
combined movement patterns.
PMID: 8923628, UI: 97082392
Incidence of common postural
abnormalities in the cervical, shoulder, and
thoracic regions and their
association with pain in two age groups of healthy
subjects.
Griegel-Morris P, Larson K,
Mueller-Klaus K, Oatis CA
1: Phys Ther 1992
Jun;72(6):425-31
Philadelphia Institute for
Physical Therapy, PA 19104.
The purposes of this study
were to identify the incidence of postural
abnormalities of the thoracic,
cervical, and shoulder regions in two age groups
of healthy subjects and to
explore whether these abnormalities were associated
with pain. Eighty-eight
healthy subjects, aged 20 to 50 years, were asked to
answer a pain questionnaire
and to stand by a plumb line for postural assessment
of forward head, rounded
shoulders, and kyphosis. Subjects were divided into two
age groups: a 20- to
35-year-old group (mean = 25, SD = 63) and a 36- to
50-year-old group (mean = 47,
SD = 2.6). Interrater and intrarater reliability
(Cohen's Kappa coefficients)
for postural assessment were established at .611
and .825, respectively.
Frequency counts revealed postural abnormalities were
prevalent (forward head = 66%,
kyphosis = 38%, right rounded shoulder = 73%,
left rounded shoulder = 66%).
No relationship was found between the severity of
postural abnormality and the
severity and frequency of pain. Subjects with more
severe postural abnormalities,
however, had a significantly increased incidence
of pain, as determined by
chi-square analysis (critical chi 2 = 6, df = 2, P
less than .05). Subjects with
kyphosis and rounded shoulders had an increased
incidence of interscapular
pain, and those with a forward-head posture had an
increased incidence of
cervical, interscapular, and headache pain.
PMID: 1589462, UI: 92270665
1: J Manipulative Physiol Ther
1999 Jan;22(1):26-8
The ability to reproduce the
neutral zero position of the head.
Christensen HW, Nilsson N
Nordic Institute of
Chiropractic & Clinical Biomechanics, Odense, Denmark.
OBJECTIVE: To determine how
precisely asymptomatic subjects can reproduce a
neutral zero position of the
head. STUDY DESIGN: Repeated measures of the active
cervical neutral zero
position. SETTING: Institute of Medical Biology (Center of
Biomechanics) at Odense
University. PARTICIPANTS: Thirty-eight asymptomatic
students from the University
of Odense, male/female ratio 20:18 and mean age
24.3 years (range, 20 to 30
years). INTERVENTION: Measurements of the location
of the neutral zero head
position by use of the electrogoniometer CA-6000 Spine
Motion Analyzer. Each
subject's neutral zero position with eyes closed was
measured 3 times. The device
gives the localization of the neutral zero as
coordinates in 3 dimensions
(x, v, z) corresponding to the 3 motion planes.
RESULTS: The mean difference
from neutral zero in 3 motion planes was found to
be 2.7 degrees in the sagittal
plane, 1.0 degree in the horizontal plane, and
0.65 degree in the frontal
plane. CONCLUSION: We found that young adult
asymptomatic subjects are very
good at reproducing the neutral zero position of
the head. This suggests the
existence of some advanced neurologic control
mechanisms.
Publication Types:
Clinical trial
PMID: 10029946, UI: 99154208
1: Spine 1997 Apr
15;22(8):865-8
Ability to reproduce head
position after whiplash injury.
Loudon JK, Ruhl M, Field E
Department of Physical Therapy
Education, University of Kansas Medical Center,
Kansas City, USA.
STUDY DESIGN: A two-group
design with repeated measures. OBJECTIVES: To
determine if there is loss of
the ability to reproduce target position of the
cervical spine individuals who
have sustained a whiplash injury. SUMMARY OF
BACKGROUND DATA: The ability
to sense position is a prerequisite for functional
movement. Injury may have a
deleterious effect on this ability, resulting in
inaccurate positioning of the
head and neck with respect to the body coordinates
and to the environment.
METHODS: Eleven subjects with history of whiplash injury
(age, 42 +/- 8.7 years) and 11
age-matched asymptomatic subjects (age, 43 +/-
3.1 years) participated in the
study. Effects of whiplash injury on the ability
to replicate a target position
of the head were assessed. Maximum rotation of
the neck and ability to
reproduce the target angle were measured using a
standard cervical
range-of-motion device. Subjects' perception of "neutral"
position was also assessed.
RESULTS: Analysis of variance indicated the whiplash
subjects were less accurate in
reproducing the target angle than were control
subjects. These whiplash
subjects tended to overshoot the target. In addition,
the subjects in the whiplash
group were often inaccurate in their assessment of
neutral position. CONCLUSIONS:
Subjects who have experienced a whiplash injury
demonstrate a deficit in their
ability to reproduce a target position of the
neck. These data are
consistent with the hypothesis that these subjects possess
an inaccurate perception of
head position secondary to their injury. This study
has implications for the
rehabilitation of individuals with whiplash injury.
PMID: 9127919, UI: 97273529
1: Acta Odontol Scand 1989
Apr;47(2):105-9
Natural head position
recording on frontal skull radiographs.
Huggare J
Institute of Dentistry,
University of Oulu, Finland.
This paper sets out to
evaluate the variability and reproducibility of frontal
head position in healthy young
adults. Two posteroanterior skull radiographs of
22 dental students and 2
frontal photographs of these and 24 other students,
taken at a 1-week interval,
were analyzed with regard to head position and
cervical spine inclination.
Head position varied in the range of +/- 5 degrees
with regard to the vertical.
The cervical spine was more often inclined to the
right than to the left. The
reproducibility of the head position with regard to
the craniovertical angle was
1.15 degrees and that of the craniocervical and
cervicohorizontal angles 0.93
degrees and 1.45 degrees, respectively. Any
deviation in the frontal head
position tended to be spontaneously corrected on
looking in a mirror. It is
concluded that the frontal head position is slightly
more accurately reproducible
than the sagittal head position. The use of a
mirror in front of the patient
when recording the frontal natural head position
is not to be recommended.
PMID: 2718757, UI: 89244136
1: J Orthop Res 1992
Mar;10(2):217-25
Trunk positioning accuracy in
children 7-18 years old.
Ashton-Miller JA, McGlashen
KM, Schultz AB
Department of Mechanical
Engineering and Applied Mechanics, University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor
48109-2125.
Trunk proprioception was
measured in 253 healthy children 7-18 years of age
using infrared markers placed
on the back of the head and on the skin over the
T1, T8, and S1 spinous
processes. The children were tested for their accuracy in
sensing return of the head and
trunk to a centered, neutral position in the
frontal plane. Whole-body sway
was also quantified during 10 s of relaxed
standing by measuring mean
amplitudes of trunk marker and foot center of
pressure (CP) movements. The
results show that trunk positioning accuracy
improved significantly with
age (p = 0.000). Subjects could position their trunk
in the frontal plane to within
a mean (+/- SD) of 2.5 (+/- 1.1) and 0.9 (+/-
0.6) degrees of the neutral
position at ages 7 and 18 years, respectively. No
statistically significant
gender differences were found. At every age trunk
positioning accuracy was
diminished in the presence of a continuous external
trunk moment (equivalent to
0.01 x body weight x height), although not
significantly so. Neither mean
trunk sway nor CP amplitudes were significantly
correlated with age or sex.
The overall results suggest that spine
decompensation is only
abnormal when it exceeds 20 mm in healthy children and
adolescents.
PMID: 1740740, UI: 92156965
1: J Orthop Res 1991
Jul;9(4):576-83
Trunk positioning accuracy in
the frontal and sagittal planes.
McGlashen K, Ashton-Miller JA,
Green M, Schultz AB
Department of Mechanical
Engineering and Applied Mechanics, University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor
48109-2125.
The accuracy with which the
head and spine could be positioned in the frontal
and sagittal planes relative
to the pelvis was measured and compared in ten
healthy adult males. Subjects
were tested with eyes closed, while standing with
their pelvis externally
restrained. The positions of markers, attached to the
back of the head and over each
of the T1, T6, T11, and L3 spinous processes,
were measured to the nearest
mm using strain-gaged flexible beam transducers.
Subjects were tested for their
accuracy in sensing return of the trunk to an
initial neutral position under
different test conditions. Results showed that
positioning was 16-45% more
accurate in the frontal than in the sagittal plane,
although the difference did
not reach statistical significance. T1 could be
centered to within 7 and 10 mm
in the frontal and sagittal planes, respectively.
No significant differences
were found between active and passive positioning
accuracies. Presence of an
external trunk moment did not significantly affect
trunk positioning accuracy,
although it systematically caused overshoot of the
neutral position. Lastly,
lateral trunk shifts exceeding 12 mm may be classified
as abnormal in young adults.
PMID: 2045984, UI: 91259346
1: J Manipulative Physiol Ther
1998 Jul-Aug;21(6):388-91
The relationship between
posture and curvature of the cervical spine.
Visscher CM, de Boer W, Naeije
M
Department of Oral Function,
Academic Centre for Dentistry, Amsterdam, The
Netherlands.
OBJECTIVE: To study the
relationship between posture and curvature of the
cervical spine in healthy
subjects. SUBJECTS: The study was composed of 54
healthy students (25 men and
29 women) aged 20-31 yr with a mean age of 24.7 yr.
METHODS: Lateral radiographs
were taken of the head and cervical spine of the
subjects while standing in a
neutral position. Cervical spine posture was
quantified by the angle of a
reference line, composed of reference points of the
upper six cervical vertebrae,
with the horizontal axis. The curvature of the
cervical spine was classified
visually as lordotic, straight or reversed.
RESULTS: A relationship was
found between posture and curvature of the cervical
spine (p = .006); a more
forward posture of the cervical spine was related to a
partly reversed curvature; and
a more upright posture was related to a lordotic
curvature. Moreover, men more
often exhibited a straight curvature, and women
more often exhibited a partly
reversed curvature. CONCLUSION: The curvature of
the cervical spine is related
to the subject's posture and gender.
PMID: 9726065, UI: 98394128
Erector spinae lever arm
length variations with changes in spinal curvature.
Tveit P, Daggfeldt K, Hetland
S, Thorstensson A
Spine 1994 Jan
15;19(2):199-204
Magnetic resonance imaging was
used to study the effect of different curvatures in the lumbar
spine on lever arm lengths of
the erector spinae musculature. Eleven subjects were
instructed to
simulate static lifts while
lying supine in a magnetic resonance camera with the lumbar
spine either
in kyphosis or lordosis. A
sagittal image of the spine was obtained to analyze the
lumbosacral
angle and to guide the imaging
of transverse sections through each disc (L1/L2 to L5/S1).
Images
were analyzed for lever arm
lengths of the erector spinae muscle (ES) and the erector
spinae
aponeurosis (ESA), the latter
functioning as a tendon for superiorly positioned ES muscle
portions. The lumbosacral
angle (between superior surfaces of S1 and L4) averaged 44
degrees
in the lordosed, 26 degrees in
the kyphosed and 41 degrees in a neutral supine position. In
lordosis, the lever arm
lengths were significantly longer than in kyphosis for all
levels, averaging
60-63 mm (ES) and 82-86 mm (ESA).
The corresponding values for kyphosis were 49-57 mm
(ES) and 67-77 mm (ESA),
respectively. Thus, there was a considerable effect (10-24%)
of
lumbar curvature on lever arm
lengths for the back extensor muscles. The change in leverage
will
affect the need for extensor
muscle force and thus the magnitude of compression in the
lumbar
spine in loading situations
such as lifting.
Commonly adopted postures and
their effect on the lumbar spine.
Dolan P, Adams MA, Hutton WC
Spine 1988 Feb;13(2):197-201
Polytechnic of Central
London, England.
The activity of the erector
spinae muscles and the changes in lumbar curvature were
measured in
11 subjects in a range of
commonly adopted postures to see if there were any consistent
trends.
Surface electrodes were used
to measure back muscle activity and lumbar curvature was
measured using electronic
inclinometers. The results showed that many commonly adopted
postures reduced the lumbar
lordosis when compared with erect standing or sitting, even at
the expense of increasing the back muscle activity.
The effects of flexion on the
geometry and actions of the lumbar erector spinae.
Macintosh JE, Bogduk N, Pearcy
MJ
Spine 1993 Jun 1;18(7):884-93
Faculty of Medicine,
University of Newcastle, Australia.
A modeling study was
undertaken to determine the effects of flexion on the forces
exerted by the
lumbar back muscles.
Twenty-nine fascicles of the lumbar multifidus and erector
spinae were
plotted onto tracings of
radiographs of nine normal volunteers in the flexion position.
Moment
arms and force vectors of each
fascicle were calculated. The model revealed that moment arms
decreased slightly in length
resulting in no more than an 18% decrease in maximum extensor
moments exerted across the
lumbar spine. Compression loads were not significantly
different
from those generated in the
upright posture. However, there were major changes in shear
forces,
in particular a reversal from
a net anterior to a net posterior shear force at the L5/S1
segment.
Flexion causes substantial
elongation of the back muscles, which must therefore reduce
their
maximum active tension.
However, if increases in passive tension are considered it
emerges that
the compression forces and
moments exerted by the back muscles in full flexion are not
significantly different from
those produced in the upright posture.
Lumbar lordosis. Effects of
sitting and standing.
Lord MJ, Small JM, Dinsay JM,
Watkins RG
Spine 1997 Nov 1;22(21):2571-4
Kerlan-Jobe Orthopaedic
Clinic, Inglewood, California, USA.
STUDY DESIGN: The effect of
sitting versus standing posture on lumbar lordosis was studied
retrospectively by
radiographic analysis of 109 patients with low back pain.
OBJECTIVE: To
document changes in segmental
and total lumbar lordosis between sitting and standing
radiographs. SUMMARY OF
BACKGROUND DATA: Preservation of physiologic lumbar
lordosis is an important
consideration when performing fusion of the lumbar spine. The
appropriate degree of lumbar
lordosis has not been defined. METHODS: Total and segmental
lumbar lordosis from L1 to S1
was assessed by an independent observer using the Cobb angle
measurements of the lateral
radiographs of the lumbar spine obtained with the patient in
the sitting
and standing positions.
RESULTS: Lumbar lordosis averaged 49 degrees standing and 34
degrees sitting from L1 to S1,
47 degrees standing and 33 degrees sitting from L2 to S1, 31
degrees standing and 22
degrees sitting from L4 to S1, and 18 degrees standing and 15
degrees
sitting from L5 to S1.
CONCLUSION: Lumbar lordosis while standing was nearly 50%
greater
on average than sitting lumbar
lordosis. The clinical significance of this data may pertain
to: 1) the
known correlation of increased
intradiscal pressure with sitting, which may be caused by this
decrease in lordosis; 2) the
benefit of a sitting lumbar support that increases lordosis;
and 3) the
consideration of an
appropriate degree of lordosis in fusion of the lumbar spine.
Effect of patient position on
the sagittal-plane profile of the thoracolumbar spine.
Wood KB, Kos P, Schendel M,
Persson K
: J Spinal Disord 1996
Apr;9(2):165-9
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455, USA.
Although the normal sagittal
profile of the thoracolumbar spine has been described, this
has been
obtained primarily by using
young individuals standing. We sought to describe the sagittal
profile
of the thoracolumbar spine in
an older population in the supine cross-table lateral position
compared with that standing.
We enrolled 50 volunteers with no history of back pain or
spine
deformity and 50 matched
subjects with mechanical back pain (LBP) only. Lateral
radiographs
of the thoracolumbar spine
(T10-S1) in both standing and cross-table supine positions
were
obtained. Lordosis from L1 to
S1, kyphosis from T10 to L1, and the changes seen moving from
the supine position to
standing were calculated. There were few differences comparing
the two
groups in either the standing
or cross-table supine position, or when changing positions.
Within
each group, however, there
were small, but significant, differences in the midlumbar and
thoracolumbar spine when
comparing supine versus standing. Both asymptomatic
individuals and
those with a history of LBP
demonstrated similar small but statistically significant
increases in
lumbar lordosis and
thoracolumbar kyphosis when standing versus supine. The
clinical
significance of these
findings remains to be determined.
Kinetic potential of the
lumbar trunk musculature about three orthogonal orthopaedic
axes in extreme postures.
McGill SM
Spine 1991 Jul;16(7):809-15
Department of Kinesiology,
University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Many studies have examined the
mechanics of the lumbar spine in various planes, but only a
limited number of
three-dimensional investigations have been reported. Analysis
of the low back
during complex, dynamic
postures demands rigorous representation of the trunk
musculature. The
data of this study
demonstrated the force and torque contributions of
approximately 50 laminas of
various trunk muscles to
flexion-extension, lateral bending, and axial twisting torque
at the L4-L5
joint. This analysis was
conducted with the spine in an upright standing posture and
when fully
flexed (60 degrees), laterally
bent (25 degrees), and axially twisted (10 degrees) together
with
two examples of combined
postures. Maximum moment potential, muscle length excursions,
and
the resultant compressive,
anteroposterior shear, and lateral shear forces on the joint
were also
computed. The results indicate
that the position of the vertebrae and their orthopaedic axes,
which are a function of spinal
posture, are an important factor in the reasonable
determination of
joint compressive, lateral
shear, and anteroposterior shear loads. Muscle length changes
that
exceeded 20% of their
respective length during upright standing were not observed
during a full
axial twist, but were observed
in portions of the abdominal obliques during lateral bending,
and in
some extensors during full
flexion. Extreme postures tended to change the torque
potential of
some muscles and influence
joint load. Various portions of erector spinae were observed
to have
appreciable potential to
generate torque about all three orthopaedic axes. This
observation
supports the notion held by
some therapists that conditioning of the erector spinae is of
utmost
importance.
On neck muscle activity and
load reduction in sitting postures. An electromyographic and
biomechanical study with applications in ergonomics and
rehabilitation.
Schuldt K
Scand J Rehabil Med Suppl
1988;19:1-49
Department of Physical
Medicine and Rehabilitation Karolinska Institute, Stockholm,
Sweden.
In this study of the
biomechanics and muscular function of the cervical spine,
skilled women
workers simulated standardized
electromechanical assembly work in eight sitting postures.
Normalized electromyography
was used to quantify activity in neck-and-shoulder muscles.
With
the whole spine flexed, muscle
activity in the cervical erector spinae, trapezius and
thoracic
erector spinae muscles was
higher than when the whole spine was straight and vertical.
The
posture with the trunk
slightly inclined backward and neck vertical gave the lowest
activity levels.
Flexed neck compared to
vertical neck gave higher activity in the cervical erector
spinae. Work
with abducted arm gave high
neck muscle activity. Work postures can thus be optimized to
diminish neck muscle load. Two
ergonomic acids were studied during the work cycle. Elbow
support reduced the activity
in the trapezius and thoracic erector spinae/rhomboids muscles
in the
posture with the whole spine
flexed and in the posture with the whole spine vertical. Arm
suspension gave mainly similar
reduction in these postures, and also a reduction in the
cervical
erector spinae. In the
position with the trunk slightly inclined backward, arm
suspension gave a
reduction in the trapezius.
These findings indicate that arm support or arm suspension can
be used
to reduce neck muscle load.
Three methodological studies related to neck muscle load and
normalization were included.
1) Examination of the effect of different isometric maximum
test
contractions on neck muscles
showed that all contractions activated all muscles studied,
including
those on the contralateral
side, to some extent and at various levels. The highest
frequency of
attained maximum levels was:
for neck extension, in cervical erector spinae; for cervical
spinae
lateral flexion, in splenius
and levator scapulae; for arm abduction, in trapezius, and,
for shoulder
elevation and scapular
retraction/elevation, in thoracic erector spinae/rhomboids.
Proximal
resistance gave higher
activity than distal. 2) The relationship between EMG activity
and muscular
moment was studied in women
during submaximal and maximum isometric neck extension. The
relationship found was
non-linear, with greater increase in activity at high moments
in the
posterior neck muscles
studied. The slightly flexed cervical spine position induced a
higher level
of activity in erector spinae
cervicalis than did the neutral position for a given relative
muscular
moment. 3) Muscular activity
was related to cervical spine position during maximum
isometric
neck extension. Peak activity
in the cervical erector spinae was found in the slightly
flexed
lower-cervical spine position.
Intensity and character of
pain and muscular activity levels elicited by maintained
extreme flexion position of the lower-cervical-upper-thoracic
spine.
Harms-Ringdahl K, Ekholm
J Scand J Rehabil Med
1986;18(3):117-26
The aim of this study was to
find out whether maintained extreme flexion position of
the lower-cervical-upper-thoracic spine
in a sitting posture could induce pain, and thus possibly
play a role in work related disorders
with cervico-brachial pain. Ten healthy subjects assessed
pain intensity of
experimentally-induced pain on a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS).
The quality and location of the pain
was indicated on a drawing of the body. The load moment
induced by the weight of the
head-and-neck was calculated. The EMG activity levels were
recorded from the splenius, thoracic
erector spinae-rhomboid, and descending part of trapezius
muscles. This posture, which resembles
the posture in some common work, caused pain in all subjects.
The pain was experienced within 15 min,
increased with time, disappeared within 15 min after the
end of provocation, but was again
experienced by nine subjects the same evening or next
morning and lasted up to four days. The
primary location was in the dorsal part of the lower cervical
and upper thoracic spine; three
subjects also reported pain in the arms and one in the head.
The recorded EMG levels were very low,
but they increased somewhat during provocation. It
is suggested that thorough recordings
of work postures should be included in ergonomic analyses
to provide a basis for the avoidance of
such positions which might provoke pain.
Influence of head position on
dorsal neck muscle efficiency.
Mayoux-Benhamou MA, Revel M
Electromyogr Clin Neurophysiol
1993 Apr-May;33(3):161-6
Department of rehabilitation,
Hopital Cochin, Paris, France.
The aim of this study was to
assess the influence of head position on dorsal neck
muscle efficiency in the sagittal
plane. Fifteen subjects participated. The EMG versus isometric
extension moment of dorsal neck muscles
was studied in neutral (with subject gazing on a horizontal
plane), cervical flexed, and cervical
extended positions. A vectorial construction was created by
means of photographs to calculate the
extension moment which balances measured pulling force
and gravitational force in isometric
conditions. The maximum extension was highest in neutral
position. The EMG/moment relationship
was non-linear. The ratio between the EMG and the
generated moment differed significantly
in the three positions (p < 0.01) and was lower in neutral
position. These results demonstrate the
influence of head position on dorsal neck muscle
efficiency; muscles appeared most
efficient in neutral position. Muscle length, depending on
head position, is probably the main
influencing factor.
PMID:
8495657, UI: 93265827
Genioglossi muscle activity in
response to changes in anterior/neutral head posture.
Milidonis MK, Kraus SL, Segal
RL, Widmer CG
Am J Orthod Dentofacial Orthop
1993 Jan;103(1):39-44
Orthopaedic Clinical
Specialist, Rehab Services, Akron City Hospital, Ohio.
Clinicians have acknowledged swallowing, tongue activity, and
head posture as interdependent variables that must be
concurrently examined. The purpose of this study was to
evaluate genioglossus activity during
swallowing, rest, and maximal tongue protrusion in two
head positions (HPs) with a noninvasive
recording device. Eight Angle Class I subjects
were evaluated. Repeated measures were
performed in a single session to record surface intraoral
electromyographic (EMG) activity of the genioglossus muscles.
Head position was measured in angular
degrees from photographs. Three variables were measured in
both the neutral-head position (NHP)
and anterior-head position (AHP): (1) duration of genioglossus
EMG during swallowing, (2) genioglossus
EMG with the tongue at rest, and (3) genioglossus EMG
during maximal isometric tongue
protrusion. A Wilcoxin matched-pair signed-rank statistic was
used for EMG analysis, and a paired
sample t test statistic was used for head posture analysis.
The angles measured for NHP and AHP
within each subject were significantly different verifying
two different head positions. Duration
of swallowing was not significantly different between
head positions. Resting genioglossus
EMG and maximal isometric genioglossus EMG were
statistically greater in the AHP. The
data suggest that head positional changes may have an effect
on genioglossus muscle activation
thresholds. However, small differences in resting EMG
activity between head positions
suggests that the clinical significance needs further
investigation.
Influence of muscle
morphometry and moment arms on the moment-generating capacity
of human neck muscles.
Vasavada AN, Li S, Delp SL
Spine 1998 Feb
15;23(4):412-22
Department of Biomedical
Engineering, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
STUDY DESIGN: The function of
neck muscles was quantified by incorporating
experimentally measured morphometric
parameters into a three-dimensional biomechanical
model. OBJECTIVE: To analyze how muscle
morphometry and moment arms influence moment-generating
capacity of human neck muscles in physiologic ranges of
motion. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Previous biomechanical
analyses of the head-neck system have used simplified
representations of the musculoskeletal anatomy. The force-
and moment-generating properties of individual neck muscles
have not been reported. METHODS: A computer graphics model
was developed that incorporates detailed neck muscle
morphometric data into a model of cervical musculoskeletal
anatomy and intervertebral kinematics. Moment arms and
force-generating capacity of neck muscles were calculated for
a range of head positions. RESULTS: With the head in the
upright neutral position, the muscles with the
largest moment arms and
moment-generating capacities are sternocleidomastoid in
flexion and lateral bending,
semispinalis capitis and splenius capitis in extension, and
trapezius in axial rotation. The moment
arms of certain neck muscles (e.g., rectus capitis posterior
major in axial rotation) change
considerably in the physiologic range of motion. Most neck
muscles maintain at least 80% of their
peak force-generating capacity throughout the range of motion;
however, the force-generating apacities of muscles with
large moment arms and/or short fascicles (e.g., splenius
capitis) vary substantially with head posture. CONCLUSION:
These results quantify the contributions of individual neck
muscles to moment-generating capacity and demonstrate that
variations in force-generating capacity and moment arm
throughout the range of motion can alter muscle
moment-generating capacities.
[Electromyographic study on
the effects of head position to head and neck muscles].
Omae T, Inoue S, Saito O,
Ishii H, Ishigaki S, Okuda T, Nakamura T, Akanishi M,
Maruyama T
Nippon Hotetsu Shika Gakkai
Zasshi 1989 Apr;33(2):352-8
The purpose of this study is
to reveal the relationship between the head position, and the
neck
and head muscles. At 4 head
positions, the activities of masseter, anterior temporal,
anterior
digastric, sternocleidomastoid
and trapezius muscle of ten normal subjects standing straight
were
investigated
electromyographically with surface electrodes during voluntary
maximal clenching in
centric occlusion. Head
positions were right tilting, left tilting, up-right and
natural head position.
The results obtained were as
follows; 1. During head tilting, the activities of anterior
digastric and sternocleidomastoid muscle
on the tilting side were increased, the activities of masseter
and trapezius muscle on the opposite
side of the tilting side were increased, the activity of the
anterior temporal muscle did not vary
from the activity during up-right head position. 2. During
natural head position, only the
activity of sternocleidomastoid muscle on the natural tilting
side was increased.
Selective electromyography of
dorsal neck muscles in humans.
Mayoux-Benhamou MA, Revel M,
Vallee C
Brain Res 1997
Feb;113(2):353-60
Laboratoire d'Exploration de
l'Appareil Locomoteur et d'Evaluation du Handicap, Universite
Paris V, Hopital Cochin, France.
The patterns of activation of
splenius capitis, semispinalis capitis, transversospinalis,
and levator
scapulae muscles were studied
during various head-neck positions, movements, and
isometric tests in 19 healthy human
subjects. Myoelectric activities were recorded with
intramuscular bipolar wire electrodes.
Cervical computerized tomography of each subject was
performed before the electromyography
session in order to guide electrode insertion. Head motion
was recorded using an electromechanical
device. This report demonstrates that head motion
results from a complex interaction of
active muscular forces, passive ligamentous forces, and
gravity. Splenius capitis has two main
functions, i.e., cervical extension and ipsilateral rotation.
Semi spinalis capitis and the
transversospinalis are mainly extensors, and levator scapulae
acts primarily on the shoulder girdle.
Splenius capitis, semispinalis capitis, and transversospinalis
play a subordinate part in ipsilateral
tilting. In addition, most subjects' semispinalis capitis were
gradually recruited during ipsilateral
rotation. No signal was detected from the transversospinalis
during rotation tests.
Can stress-related shoulder
and neck pain develop independently of muscle activity?
Vasseljen O Jr, Westgaard RH
Pain 1996 Feb;64(2):221-30
Division of Organization and
Work Science, Norwegian Institute of Technology, University
of Trondheim, Norway.
A case-control designed was
used to investigate associations and interactions between
muscle activity measured by surface
electromyography (EMG) in the upper trapezius muscle
and subjectively reported risk factors
in workers with and without shoulder and neck pain. EMG
data were collected both in the
workplace (indicating vocational muscle activity) and in a
laboratory setting (indicating
non-specific muscle activity). Women in manual (15 pairs) and
office (24 pairs) work were included.
The pairs were matched on age, gender and on current and
historical work load, such as working
hours, type and length of employment. Previous reports of this
study have indicated that shoulder and
neck myalgia was associated with increased muscle activity for
the manual workers, and with
psychological and psychosocial factors for the office workers.
These risk factors were in the present
report used as the basis for studying associations and
interactions between muscle activity
(1), psychological and psychosocial factors (2), and shoulder
and neck pain (3). Subjectively
reported or perceived general tension, a stress symptom
presumed related to psychosocial and
psychological factors, was previously found to be the
strongest and only variable separating
cases and controls in both work groups. In this paper, no
relationship was found between
perceived general tension and EMG variables for the office
workers. For the manual workers a
strong interaction was found; perceived general tension
correlated positively with EMG
variables for the controls, and negatively with EMG variables
for the cases. It is hypothesised that
the feeling of general tension represents a physiological
activation response that may or may not
include muscle fibre activation. This implies that pain
provoked by psychosocial stress factors
may not be mediated through increased muscle activity.
1: Int J Rehabil Res 1999
Sep;22(3):207-14
Treatment based on H-reflexes
testing improves disability status in patients
with cervical radiculopathy.
Abdulwahab SS
Texas Woman's University
School of Physical Therapy, Houston, USA.
BACKGROUND: Postural
modification in patients with lumbosacral radiculopathy
either causes further H-reflex
suppression, indicating increased root
compression, or it effects
recovery, indicating decompression of the spinal
root. The posture that effects
maximum recovery of the H-reflex amplitude is
called optimum spinal posture
(OSP) and is suggested as a therapeutic exercise
to decompress the compromised
nerve root. The focus of this study was to
identify the OSP that effects
the maximum recovery of the flexor carpi radialis
(FCR) H-reflex and to study
its effect on the disability status in patients with
cervical radiculopathy.
SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Fourteen patients (46 +/- 12 y)
with confirmed symptoms of C7
radiculopathy for the previous 6 months
volunteered for the study. The
FCR H-reflex was elicited by electrical
stimulation of the median
nerve at the cubital fossa (0.5 ms, 0.2 pps at H-max).
Signals from the FCR muscle
were recorded using a Cadwell 5200A EMG unit. The
FCR H-reflex was recorded in
natural sitting position with the head in natural
position and in the OSP. Four
traces of the H-reflex were recorded and averaged.
The disability status was
evaluated, using the Neck Disability Index (NDI),
before exercising in the OSP
and after 2 days of exercise in the OSP. DATA
ANALYSIS: Paired t-test and
Spearman's correlation coefficients were used.
RESULTS: The H-reflex
amplitude and latency were significantly different in the
OSP and with the head in a
natural position (P < 0.004; P < 0.011). Larger
reflex amplitude and shorter
latency were recorded in the OSP. The NDI scores
were considerably improved
after exercising in the OSP (P < 0.001). Spearman's
correlation coefficient showed
negative association between the H-reflex
amplitude and the NDI scores
(r = -0.64 to -0.54; P < 0.05). CONCLUSION:
Exercising in the OSP
increased the H-reflex amplitude and decreased latency of
the compromised cervical root.
It resulted in decreasing the disability status
in this group of patients.
PMID: 10839674, UI: 20296484
1: J Vestib Res 1996
Nov-Dec;6(6):439-53
Effects of different
treatments on postural performance in patients with
cervical root compression. A
randomized prospective study assessing the
importance of the neck in
postural control.
Persson L, Karlberg M,
Magnusson M
Department of Neurosurgery,
University Hospital, Lund, Sweden.
Patients with cervical root
compression were used as a "model" to investigate
the possible importance of
neck disorders and cervical sensory information in
postural control. We assessed
postural performance with posturography before and
after treatment in 71
consecutive patients with MRI-verified cervical root
compression without medullary
compression. The patients were randomized to
surgery (n = 22),
physiotherapy (n = 24) or treatment with cervical collars (n =
25). There were no differences
in postural performance or pain intensity between
the groups before treatment.
After treatment, the surgery group manifested
significant improved postural
performance and reduced neck pain scores, as
compared to the two
conservative treatment groups, and their postural
performance had improved to
the same level manifested by healthy controls. The
conservative treatment groups
manifested no consistent significant changes in
postural performance or pain
scores. Decreased muscular tension due to reduction
of cervical pain after surgery
and normalization of cervical proprioception are
suggested as possible
explanations of the improved postural control.
Publication Types:
Clinical trial
Randomized controlled trial
PMID: 8968971, UI: 97123724
Erector spinae lever arm
length variations with changes in spinal curvature.
Tveit P, Daggfeldt K, Hetland
S, Thorstensson A
Spine 1994 Jan
15;19(2):199-204
Magnetic resonance imaging was
used to study the effect of different curvatures in the lumbar
spine on lever arm lengths of
the erector spinae musculature. Eleven subjects were
instructed to
simulate static lifts while
lying supine in a magnetic resonance camera with the lumbar
spine either
in kyphosis or lordosis. A
sagittal image of the spine was obtained to analyze the
lumbosacral
angle and to guide the imaging
of transverse sections through each disc (L1/L2 to L5/S1).
Images
were analyzed for lever arm
lengths of the erector spinae muscle (ES) and the erector
spinae
aponeurosis (ESA), the latter
functioning as a tendon for superiorly positioned ES muscle
portions. The lumbosacral
angle (between superior surfaces of S1 and L4) averaged 44
degrees
in the lordosed, 26 degrees in
the kyphosed and 41 degrees in a neutral supine position. In
lordosis, the lever arm
lengths were significantly longer than in kyphosis for all
levels, averaging
60-63 mm (ES) and 82-86 mm (ESA).
The corresponding values for kyphosis were 49-57 mm
(ES) and 67-77 mm (ESA),
respectively. Thus, there was a considerable effect (10-24%)
of
lumbar curvature on lever arm
lengths for the back extensor muscles. The change in leverage
will
affect the need for extensor
muscle force and thus the magnitude of compression in the
lumbar
spine in loading situations
such as lifting.
Commonly adopted postures and
their effect on the lumbar spine.
Dolan P, Adams MA, Hutton WC
Spine 1988 Feb;13(2):197-201
Polytechnic of Central
London, England.
The activity of the erector
spinae muscles and the changes in lumbar curvature were
measured in
11 subjects in a range of
commonly adopted postures to see if there were any consistent
trends.
Surface electrodes were used
to measure back muscle activity and lumbar curvature was
measured using electronic
inclinometers. The results showed that many commonly adopted
postures reduced the lumbar
lordosis when compared with erect standing or sitting, even at
the expense of increasing the back muscle activity.
The effects of flexion on the
geometry and actions of the lumbar erector spinae.
Macintosh JE, Bogduk N, Pearcy
MJ
Spine 1993 Jun 1;18(7):884-93
Faculty of Medicine,
University of Newcastle, Australia.
A modeling study was
undertaken to determine the effects of flexion on the forces
exerted by the
lumbar back muscles.
Twenty-nine fascicles of the lumbar multifidus and erector
spinae were
plotted onto tracings of
radiographs of nine normal volunteers in the flexion position.
Moment
arms and force vectors of each
fascicle were calculated. The model revealed that moment arms
decreased slightly in length
resulting in no more than an 18% decrease in maximum extensor
moments exerted across the
lumbar spine. Compression loads were not significantly
different
from those generated in the
upright posture. However, there were major changes in shear
forces,
in particular a reversal from
a net anterior to a net posterior shear force at the L5/S1
segment.
Flexion causes substantial
elongation of the back muscles, which must therefore reduce
their
maximum active tension.
However, if increases in passive tension are considered it
emerges that
the compression forces and
moments exerted by the back muscles in full flexion are not
significantly different from
those produced in the upright posture.
Lumbar lordosis. Effects of
sitting and standing.
Lord MJ, Small JM, Dinsay JM,
Watkins RG
Spine 1997 Nov 1;22(21):2571-4
Kerlan-Jobe Orthopaedic
Clinic, Inglewood, California, USA.
STUDY DESIGN: The effect of
sitting versus standing posture on lumbar lordosis was studied
retrospectively by
radiographic analysis of 109 patients with low back pain.
OBJECTIVE: To
document changes in segmental
and total lumbar lordosis between sitting and standing
radiographs. SUMMARY OF
BACKGROUND DATA: Preservation of physiologic lumbar
lordosis is an important
consideration when performing fusion of the lumbar spine. The
appropriate degree of lumbar
lordosis has not been defined. METHODS: Total and segmental
lumbar lordosis from L1 to S1
was assessed by an independent observer using the Cobb angle
measurements of the lateral
radiographs of the lumbar spine obtained with the patient in
the sitting
and standing positions.
RESULTS: Lumbar lordosis averaged 49 degrees standing and 34
degrees sitting from L1 to S1,
47 degrees standing and 33 degrees sitting from L2 to S1, 31
degrees standing and 22
degrees sitting from L4 to S1, and 18 degrees standing and 15
degrees
sitting from L5 to S1.
CONCLUSION: Lumbar lordosis while standing was nearly 50%
greater
on average than sitting lumbar
lordosis. The clinical significance of this data may pertain
to: 1) the
known correlation of increased
intradiscal pressure with sitting, which may be caused by this
decrease in lordosis; 2) the
benefit of a sitting lumbar support that increases lordosis;
and 3) the
consideration of an
appropriate degree of lordosis in fusion of the lumbar spine.
Effect of patient position on
the sagittal-plane profile of the thoracolumbar spine.
Wood KB, Kos P, Schendel M,
Persson K
: J Spinal Disord 1996
Apr;9(2):165-9
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455, USA.
Although the normal sagittal
profile of the thoracolumbar spine has been described, this
has been
obtained primarily by using
young individuals standing. We sought to describe the sagittal
profile
of the thoracolumbar spine in
an older population in the supine cross-table lateral position
compared with that standing.
We enrolled 50 volunteers with no history of back pain or
spine
deformity and 50 matched
subjects with mechanical back pain (LBP) only. Lateral
radiographs
of the thoracolumbar spine
(T10-S1) in both standing and cross-table supine positions
were
obtained. Lordosis from L1 to
S1, kyphosis from T10 to L1, and the changes seen moving from
the supine position to
standing were calculated. There were few differences comparing
the two
groups in either the standing
or cross-table supine position, or when changing positions.
Within
each group, however, there
were small, but significant, differences in the midlumbar and
thoracolumbar spine when
comparing supine versus standing. Both asymptomatic
individuals and
those with a history of LBP
demonstrated similar small but statistically significant
increases in
lumbar lordosis and
thoracolumbar kyphosis when standing versus supine. The
clinical
significance of these
findings remains to be determined.
Kinetic potential of the
lumbar trunk musculature about three orthogonal orthopaedic
axes in extreme postures.
McGill SM
Spine 1991 Jul;16(7):809-15
Department of Kinesiology,
University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Many studies have examined the
mechanics of the lumbar spine in various planes, but only a
limited number of
three-dimensional investigations have been reported. Analysis
of the low back
during complex, dynamic
postures demands rigorous representation of the trunk
musculature. The
data of this study
demonstrated the force and torque contributions of
approximately 50 laminas of
various trunk muscles to
flexion-extension, lateral bending, and axial twisting torque
at the L4-L5
joint. This analysis was
conducted with the spine in an upright standing posture and
when fully
flexed (60 degrees), laterally
bent (25 degrees), and axially twisted (10 degrees) together
with
two examples of combined
postures. Maximum moment potential, muscle length excursions,
and
the resultant compressive,
anteroposterior shear, and lateral shear forces on the joint
were also
computed. The results indicate
that the position of the vertebrae and their orthopaedic axes,
which are a function of spinal
posture, are an important factor in the reasonable
determination of
joint compressive, lateral
shear, and anteroposterior shear loads. Muscle length changes
that
exceeded 20% of their
respective length during upright standing were not observed
during a full
axial twist, but were observed
in portions of the abdominal obliques during lateral bending,
and in
some extensors during full
flexion. Extreme postures tended to change the torque
potential of
some muscles and influence
joint load. Various portions of erector spinae were observed
to have
appreciable potential to
generate torque about all three orthopaedic axes. This
observation
supports the notion held by
some therapists that conditioning of the erector spinae is of
utmost
importance.
On neck muscle activity and
load reduction in sitting postures. An electromyographic and
biomechanical study with applications in ergonomics and
rehabilitation.
Schuldt K
Scand J Rehabil Med Suppl
1988;19:1-49
Department of Physical
Medicine and Rehabilitation Karolinska Institute, Stockholm,
Sweden.
In this study of the
biomechanics and muscular function of the cervical spine,
skilled women
workers simulated standardized
electromechanical assembly work in eight sitting postures.
Normalized electromyography
was used to quantify activity in neck-and-shoulder muscles.
With
the whole spine flexed, muscle
activity in the cervical erector spinae, trapezius and
thoracic
erector spinae muscles was
higher than when the whole spine was straight and vertical.
The
posture with the trunk
slightly inclined backward and neck vertical gave the lowest
activity levels.
Flexed neck compared to
vertical neck gave higher activity in the cervical erector
spinae. Work
with abducted arm gave high
neck muscle activity. Work postures can thus be optimized to
diminish neck muscle load. Two
ergonomic acids were studied during the work cycle. Elbow
support reduced the activity
in the trapezius and thoracic erector spinae/rhomboids muscles
in the
posture with the whole spine
flexed and in the posture with the whole spine vertical. Arm
suspension gave mainly similar
reduction in these postures, and also a reduction in the
cervical
erector spinae. In the
position with the trunk slightly inclined backward, arm
suspension gave a
reduction in the trapezius.
These findings indicate that arm support or arm suspension can
be used
to reduce neck muscle load.
Three methodological studies related to neck muscle load and
normalization were included.
1) Examination of the effect of different isometric maximum
test
contractions on neck muscles
showed that all contractions activated all muscles studied,
including
those on the contralateral
side, to some extent and at various levels. The highest
frequency of
attained maximum levels was:
for neck extension, in cervical erector spinae; for cervical
spinae
lateral flexion, in splenius
and levator scapulae; for arm abduction, in trapezius, and,
for shoulder
elevation and scapular
retraction/elevation, in thoracic erector spinae/rhomboids.
Proximal
resistance gave higher
activity than distal. 2) The relationship between EMG activity
and muscular
moment was studied in women
during submaximal and maximum isometric neck extension. The
relationship found was
non-linear, with greater increase in activity at high moments
in the
posterior neck muscles
studied. The slightly flexed cervical spine position induced a
higher level
of activity in erector spinae
cervicalis than did the neutral position for a given relative
muscular
moment. 3) Muscular activity
was related to cervical spine position during maximum
isometric
neck extension. Peak activity
in the cervical erector spinae was found in the slightly
flexed
lower-cervical spine position.
Intensity and character of
pain and muscular activity levels elicited by maintained
extreme flexion position of the lower-cervical-upper-thoracic
spine.
Harms-Ringdahl K, Ekholm
J Scand J Rehabil Med
1986;18(3):117-26
The aim of this study was to
find out whether maintained extreme flexion position of
the lower-cervical-upper-thoracic spine
in a sitting posture could induce pain, and thus possibly
play a role in work related disorders
with cervico-brachial pain. Ten healthy subjects assessed
pain intensity of
experimentally-induced pain on a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS).
The quality and location of the pain
was indicated on a drawing of the body. The load moment
induced by the weight of the
head-and-neck was calculated. The EMG activity levels were
recorded from the splenius, thoracic
erector spinae-rhomboid, and descending part of trapezius
muscles. This posture, which resembles
the posture in some common work, caused pain in all subjects.
The pain was experienced within 15 min,
increased with time, disappeared within 15 min after the
end of provocation, but was again
experienced by nine subjects the same evening or next
morning and lasted up to four days. The
primary location was in the dorsal part of the lower cervical
and upper thoracic spine; three
subjects also reported pain in the arms and one in the head.
The recorded EMG levels were very low,
but they increased somewhat during provocation. It
is suggested that thorough recordings
of work postures should be included in ergonomic analyses
to provide a basis for the avoidance of
such positions which might provoke pain.
Influence of head position on
dorsal neck muscle efficiency.
Mayoux-Benhamou MA, Revel M
Electromyogr Clin Neurophysiol
1993 Apr-May;33(3):161-6
Department of rehabilitation,
Hopital Cochin, Paris, France.
The aim of this study was to
assess the influence of head position on dorsal neck
muscle efficiency in the sagittal
plane. Fifteen subjects participated. The EMG versus isometric
extension moment of dorsal neck muscles
was studied in neutral (with subject gazing on a horizontal
plane), cervical flexed, and cervical
extended positions. A vectorial construction was created by
means of photographs to calculate the
extension moment which balances measured pulling force
and gravitational force in isometric
conditions. The maximum extension was highest in neutral
position. The EMG/moment relationship
was non-linear. The ratio between the EMG and the
generated moment differed significantly
in the three positions (p < 0.01) and was lower in neutral
position. These results demonstrate the
influence of head position on dorsal neck muscle
efficiency; muscles appeared most
efficient in neutral position. Muscle length, depending on
head position, is probably the main
influencing factor.
PMID:
8495657, UI: 93265827
Genioglossi muscle activity in
response to changes in anterior/neutral head posture.
Milidonis MK, Kraus SL, Segal
RL, Widmer CG
Am J Orthod Dentofacial Orthop
1993 Jan;103(1):39-44
Orthopaedic Clinical
Specialist, Rehab Services, Akron City Hospital, Ohio.
Clinicians have acknowledged swallowing, tongue activity, and
head posture as interdependent variables that must be
concurrently examined. The purpose of this study was to
evaluate genioglossus activity during
swallowing, rest, and maximal tongue protrusion in two
head positions (HPs) with a noninvasive
recording device. Eight Angle Class I subjects
were evaluated. Repeated measures were
performed in a single session to record surface intraoral
electromyographic (EMG) activity of the genioglossus muscles.
Head position was measured in angular
degrees from photographs. Three variables were measured in
both the neutral-head position (NHP)
and anterior-head position (AHP): (1) duration of genioglossus
EMG during swallowing, (2) genioglossus
EMG with the tongue at rest, and (3) genioglossus EMG
during maximal isometric tongue
protrusion. A Wilcoxin matched-pair signed-rank statistic was
used for EMG analysis, and a paired
sample t test statistic was used for head posture analysis.
The angles measured for NHP and AHP
within each subject were significantly different verifying
two different head positions. Duration
of swallowing was not significantly different between
head positions. Resting genioglossus
EMG and maximal isometric genioglossus EMG were
statistically greater in the AHP. The
data suggest that head positional changes may have an effect
on genioglossus muscle activation
thresholds. However, small differences in resting EMG
activity between head positions
suggests that the clinical significance needs further
investigation.
Influence of muscle
morphometry and moment arms on the moment-generating capacity
of human neck muscles.
Vasavada AN, Li S, Delp SL
Spine 1998 Feb
15;23(4):412-22
Department of Biomedical
Engineering, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
STUDY DESIGN: The function of
neck muscles was quantified by incorporating
experimentally measured morphometric
parameters into a three-dimensional biomechanical
model. OBJECTIVE: To analyze how muscle
morphometry and moment arms influence moment-generating
capacity of human neck muscles in physiologic ranges of
motion. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Previous biomechanical
analyses of the head-neck system have used simplified
representations of the musculoskeletal anatomy. The force-
and moment-generating properties of individual neck muscles
have not been reported. METHODS: A computer graphics model
was developed that incorporates detailed neck muscle
morphometric data into a model of cervical musculoskeletal
anatomy and intervertebral kinematics. Moment arms and
force-generating capacity of neck muscles were calculated for
a range of head positions. RESULTS: With the head in the
upright neutral position, the muscles with the
largest moment arms and
moment-generating capacities are sternocleidomastoid in
flexion and lateral bending,
semispinalis capitis and splenius capitis in extension, and
trapezius in axial rotation. The moment
arms of certain neck muscles (e.g., rectus capitis posterior
major in axial rotation) change
considerably in the physiologic range of motion. Most neck
muscles maintain at least 80% of their
peak force-generating capacity throughout the range of motion;
however, the force-generating apacities of muscles with
large moment arms and/or short fascicles (e.g., splenius
capitis) vary substantially with head posture. CONCLUSION:
These results quantify the contributions of individual neck
muscles to moment-generating capacity and demonstrate that
variations in force-generating capacity and moment arm
throughout the range of motion can alter muscle
moment-generating capacities.
[Electromyographic study on
the effects of head position to head and neck muscles].
Omae T, Inoue S, Saito O,
Ishii H, Ishigaki S, Okuda T, Nakamura T, Akanishi M,
Maruyama T
Nippon Hotetsu Shika Gakkai
Zasshi 1989 Apr;33(2):352-8
The purpose of this study is
to reveal the relationship between the head position, and the
neck
and head muscles. At 4 head
positions, the activities of masseter, anterior temporal,
anterior
digastric, sternocleidomastoid
and trapezius muscle of ten normal subjects standing straight
were
investigated
electromyographically with surface electrodes during voluntary
maximal clenching in
centric occlusion. Head
positions were right tilting, left tilting, up-right and
natural head position.
The results obtained were as
follows; 1. During head tilting, the activities of anterior
digastric and sternocleidomastoid muscle
on the tilting side were increased, the activities of masseter
and trapezius muscle on the opposite
side of the tilting side were increased, the activity of the
anterior temporal muscle did not vary
from the activity during up-right head position. 2. During
natural head position, only the
activity of sternocleidomastoid muscle on the natural tilting
side was increased.
Selective electromyography of
dorsal neck muscles in humans.
Mayoux-Benhamou MA, Revel M,
Vallee C
Brain Res 1997
Feb;113(2):353-60
Laboratoire d'Exploration de
l'Appareil Locomoteur et d'Evaluation du Handicap, Universite
Paris V, Hopital Cochin, France.
The patterns of activation of
splenius capitis, semispinalis capitis, transversospinalis,
and levator
scapulae muscles were studied
during various head-neck positions, movements, and
isometric tests in 19 healthy human
subjects. Myoelectric activities were recorded with
intramuscular bipolar wire electrodes.
Cervical computerized tomography of each subject was
performed before the electromyography
session in order to guide electrode insertion. Head motion
was recorded using an electromechanical
device. This report demonstrates that head motion
results from a complex interaction of
active muscular forces, passive ligamentous forces, and
gravity. Splenius capitis has two main
functions, i.e., cervical extension and ipsilateral rotation.
Semi spinalis capitis and the
transversospinalis are mainly extensors, and levator scapulae
acts primarily on the shoulder girdle.
Splenius capitis, semispinalis capitis, and transversospinalis
play a subordinate part in ipsilateral
tilting. In addition, most subjects' semispinalis capitis were
gradually recruited during ipsilateral
rotation. No signal was detected from the transversospinalis
during rotation tests.
Can stress-related shoulder
and neck pain develop independently of muscle activity?
Vasseljen O Jr, Westgaard RH
Pain 1996 Feb;64(2):221-30
Division of Organization and
Work Science, Norwegian Institute of Technology, University
of Trondheim, Norway.
A case-control designed was
used to investigate associations and interactions between
muscle activity measured by surface
electromyography (EMG) in the upper trapezius muscle
and subjectively reported risk factors
in workers with and without shoulder and neck pain. EMG data
were collected both in the workplace
(indicating vocational muscle activity) and in a
laboratory setting (indicating
non-specific muscle activity). Women in manual (15 pairs) and
office (24 pairs) work were included.
The pairs were matched on age, gender and on current and
historical work load, such as working
hours, type and length of employment. Previous reports of this
study have indicated that shoulder and
neck myalgia was associated with increased muscle activity for
the manual workers, and with
psychological and psychosocial factors for the office workers.
These risk factors were in the present
report used as the basis for studying associations and
interactions between muscle activity
(1), psychological and psychosocial factors (2), and shoulder
and neck pain (3). Subjectively
reported or perceived general tension, a stress symptom
presumed related to psychosocial and
psychological factors, was previously found to be the
strongest and only variable separating
cases and controls in both work groups. In this paper, no
relationship was found between
perceived general tension and EMG variables for the office
workers. For the manual workers a
strong interaction was found; perceived general tension
correlated positively with EMG
variables for the controls, and negatively with EMG variables
for the cases. It is hypothesised that
the feeling of general tension represents a physiological
activation response that may or may not
include muscle fibre activation. This implies that pain
provoked by psychosocial stress factors
may not be mediated through increased muscle activity.
J Spinal Disord 2000
Feb;13(1):26-30
Surgical correction of lumbar
kyphotic deformity: posterior reduction "eggshell" osteotomy.
Danisa OA, Turner D,
Richardson WJ
J Neurosurg 2000 Jan;92(1
Suppl):50-6
Department of Surgery, Duke
University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
OBJECT: Progressive kyphotic
deformity of the lumbar or thoracolumbar spine may lead to
back pain, cosmetic deformity,
and risk of neurological compromise. The authors describe a
series of patients in whom
they performed a single-stage, posterior reduction
("eggshell")
osteotomy procedure to improve
sagittal contour by creating lordosis within a single
vertebral
body. METHODS: From 1995 to
1997 the authors performed 12 osteotomy procedures in 11
patients with thoracolumbar or
lumbar kyphosis. Seven patients presented with iatrogenic
deformity, three with
deformity secondary to traumatic injury, and one patient
with akylosing spondylitis. Their mean age at time of
surgery was 46.6 years (range 23-78 years). All patients
suffered from back pain and
were unable to stand upright, but in only one patient
were neurological findings
demonstrated. The mean preoperative deformity was -26 degrees
(range -90 to 0 degrees). At 6-month
follow-up examination the mean sagittal contour measured
17.5 degrees (range - 17 to 44
degrees), indicating that the mean surgical correction was
40.1 degrees (range 25 to 58 degrees).
All patients reported decreased back pain at follow up, and
none required narcotic analgesic
medication. Complications included a dense paresis that
developed immediately postoperatively
in a patient who was found to have residual dural
compression, which was corrected by
emergency decompressive surgery. One elderly patient suffered
a perioperative cerebrovascular
accident, and three patients suffered neurapraxia with
transient muscle weakness of the
quadriceps. There was one case of a dural tear. There were no
deaths, and prolonged intensive care
stays were not required. CONCLUSIONS: Single-level
posterior reduction osteotomy provides
excellent sagittal correction of kyphotic deformity in the
lumbar region, with a risk of cauda
equina and root and plexus compromise due to the extensive
neural exposure
Cervical laminectomy and
dentate ligament section for cervical spondylotic myelopathy.
Benzel EC, Lancon J, Kesterson
L, Hadden T
J Spinal Disord 1991
Sep;4(3):286-95
Division of Neurosurgery,
University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque
87131.
Seventy-five patients who
underwent surgical treatment for cervical spondylotic
myelopathy were
evaluated with respect to the
operative procedure performed and their outcome. Forty
patients underwent a laminectomy plus
dentate ligament section (DLS), 18 underwent laminectomy
alone, and 17 underwent an anterior
cervical decompression and fusion (ACDF). The patients
were evaluated postoperatively for both
stability and for neurologic outcome using a modification of
the Japanese Orthopaedic Association
Assessment Scale. Functional improvement occurred in
all but one patient in the laminectomy
plus DLS group. The average improvement was 3.1 +/-
1.5 points in this group; whereas the
average improvement in the laminectomy and the ACDF
groups was 2.7 +/- 2.0 and 3.0 +/- 2.0
points respectively. All of the patients who
improved substantially (greater than or
equal to 6 points) in the laminectomy plus DLS and the
laminectomy alone groups had normal
cervical spine contours (lordosis). The remainder had either a
normal lordosis or no curve (no
kyphosis or lordosis). All patients in the ACDF group had
either a straight spine or a cervical
kyphosis. These factors implicate spine curvature, in addition
to choice of operation, as factors
which are important in outcome determination. No problems
with instability occurred in either the
laminectomy or the laminectomy plus DLS group. Two
patients incurred problems with
stability in the ACDF group. Both required reoperation. In
addition, four patients in this group
who initially improved, subsequently deteriorated. Six
patients in the laminectomy plus DLS
group had a several day febrile episode related to an aseptic
meningitis process. Laminectomy plus
DLS is a safe and efficacious alternative to laminectomy for
the treatment of cervical spondylotic
myelopathy. The data presented here suggests that myelopathic
patients with a cervical kyphosis are best treated with an
ACDF and that patients with a normal
cervical lordosis are best treated with a posterior approach.
Although some selected patients may
benefit from DLS, no criteria are available which
differentiate this small subset of patients.
##18 Degenerative symptomatic
lumbar scoliosis.
Pritchett JW, Bortel DT
Spine 1993 May;18(6):700-3
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, University of Washington.
Scoliosis with progressive
deformity can develop late in life. The authors studied 200
patients older than age 50 years with
back pain and recent onset of scoliosis. Seventy-one percent
of patients were women, and no patient
had undergone spinal surgery. The curves involved the
area from T12 to L5 with the apex at L2
or L3 and did not exceed 60 degrees. Degenerative
facet joint and disc disease always
were present, and the curves were associated with a loss of
lumbar lordosis. Forty-five patients
with severe pain and neurologic deficits were studied
using myelography. Indention of the column
of contrast medium was seen at several levels but
was most severe at the apex of the
curve. It was least severe at the lumbosacral joint. The
curves progressed an average of 3
degrees per year over a 5-year period in 73% of patients.
Grade 3 apical rotation, a Cobb angle
of 30 or more, lateral vertebral translation of 6 mm or more,
and the prominence of L5 in relation to
the intercrest line were important factors in predicting
curve progression.
Cervical spondylotic
myelopathy: a review of surgical indications and decision
making.
Law MD Jr, Bernhardt M, White
AA 3d
Yale J Biol Med 1993
May-Jun;66(3):165-77
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, Beth Israel Hospital/Harvard Medical School,
Boston, Massachusetts 02215.
Cervical spondylotic
myelopathy (CSM) is frequently underdiagnosed and undertreated.
The key
to the initial diagnosis is a
careful neurologic examination. The physical findings may be
subtle,
thus a high index of suspicion
is helpful. Poor prognostic indicators and, therefore,
absolute
indications for surgery are:
1. Progression of signs and symptoms. 2. Presence of
myelopathy for
six months or longer. 3.
Compression ratio approaching 0.4 or transverse area of the
spinal cord
of 40 square millimeters or
less. Improvement is unusual with nonoperative treatment and
almost
all patients progressively
worsen. Surgical intervention is the most predictable way to
prevent
neurologic deterioration. The
recommended decompression is anterior when there is anterior
compression at one or two
levels and no significant developmental narrowing of the
canal. For
compression at more than two
levels, developmental narrowing of the canal, posterior
compression, and ossification
of the posterior longitudinal ligament, we recommend posterior
decompression. In order for
posterior decompression to be effective there must be lordosis
of
the cervical spine. If
kyphosis is present, anterior decompression is needed.
Kyphosis associated
with a developmentally narrow
canal or posterior compression may require combined anterior
and posterior approaches.
Fusion is required for instability.
Surgical treatment of
adolescent idiopathic scoliosis: the basics and the
controversies.
Bridwell KH
Spine 1994 May
1;19(9):1095-100
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, St.
Louis, Missouri.
Decisions about when to
operate should be based on more than just an arbitrary
Cobb measurement. The patient's skeletal
maturity, balance, and other parameters of curve size
also should be considered. Although it
is desirable to fuse as few segments as possible, there is
no benefit to fusing short if the top
and bottom of the fusion is not neutral and stable. Especially
for lumbar fusions, the last
instrumented vertebra must be stable, neutral, and horizontal
to the sacrum postoperatively. Many
thoracic/lumbar curve patterns are Type II (false double
major) and not double major curves.
They often can be treated with selective thoracic fusion.
However, many variables are involved,
and the potential for decompensation should be discussed with
the patient and the patient's family so
they know that it may be necessary to later add the
lumbar curve. The rod rotation maneuver
and anterior segmental spinal instrumentation often may
save fusion levels over what may have
been needed with Harrington instrumentation. However,
there are many variables here as well.
Surgeons should be particularly concerned with maintaining
and re-creating enough segmental
lordosis for the patient so the spine can withstand the
inevitable aging process.
[Radiological studies of the
cervical spine after laminoplasty by longitudinal splitting of
the spinous process].
Shimizu Y
Nippon Ika Daigaku Zasshi 1995
Aug;62(4):369-76
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, Nippon Medical School Hospital, Tokyo, Japan.
This study involved a clinical
evaluation and radiological follow-up of patients who
underwent
laminoplasty by longitudinal
splitting of the spinous process for compressive myelopathy.
The
subjects were 47 patients with
myelopathy caused by cervical spondylosis or ossification of
the
posterior longitudinal
ligament in the cervical spine. The average age at the time of
surgery was
61, and the average follow-up
period was 3 years. Overall results: the preoperative score,
by the
Japanese Orthopaedic
Association scoring system, was 9.8, and the postoperative
score was
13.9; the average recovery
rate was 54.3%. Lateral roentgenograms showed a decreased
lordosis in the cervical
curvature in 50% of the patients after laminoplasty,
especially in those
patients where stripping of
the attachments of the semispinalis cervices to the spinous
process of
C2 occurred. The recovery
rate was good in patients with postoperative lordotic or
straightened
necks (61.1% and 55.0%,
respectively), but it was poor in those with kyphotic or
S-shaped
necks (average: 36.1%).
The postoperative range of motion of the cervical spine had
decreased
to 43% of the preoperative
range.
##19 Realignment of
postoperative cervical kyphosis in children by vertebral
remodeling.
Toyama Y, Matsumoto M, Chiba
K, Asazuma T, Suzuki N, Fujimura Y, Hirabayashi K
Spine 1994 Nov
15;19(22):2565-70
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, School of Medicine, Keio University, Tokyo, Japan.
STUDY DESIGN. This study
analyzed radiographically change in the sagittal curvature of
the
cervical spine after
atlantoaxial (C1-C2) posterior fusion in children. OBJECTIVES.
This study
clarified the process of
spinal remodeling after postoperative cervical deformation in
children.
SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA.
Postoperative spinal deformations in children are
observed frequently. However,
there have been only a few reports on postoperative changes in
the sagittal curvature of the
cervical spine and spinal remodeling after those changes.
METHODS. Between 1979 and
1991, there was a total of 12 children who underwent C1-C2
posterior fusions. The average
age at the time of surgery was 9.8 years. The alignment of the
cervical spine was classified
into four groups (lordosis, straight, kyphosis, and swan-neck
deformity). Radiographic
findings suggestive of the remodeling were as follows: 1) new
bone
formation on the anterior
vertebral cortex, and 2) increase in body/canal ratio (BCR).
The
follow-up period averaged 6.2
years. RESULTS. Postoperative cervical malalignment (kyphosis
or swan-neck deformity)
occurred in four patients. In all four patients, new bone
formation and
increase in BCR at the apex of
kyphosis were observed. Therefore, there was gradual
improvement of the
malalignment by vertebral remodeling. This phenomenon was not
observed in
eight patients with normal
alignment. CONCLUSION. Realignment of postoperative
cervical
kyphosis by vertebral
remodeling was observed in children. The results of this study
suggested
that remodeling occurred even
in the spine, which was similar to the remodeling in long
bones.
Comparison of lumbar sagittal
alignment produced by different operative positions.
Stephens GC, Yoo JU, Wilbur G
Spine 1996 Aug
1;21(15):1802-6; discussion 1807
Division of Orthopaedics,
University of Kentucky, Lexington, USA.
STUDY DESIGN: This study is a
prospective evaluation of the effects of commonly used spinal
tables on lumbar sagittal
alignment. OBJECTIVES: The objective was to determine the
differences, if any, in lumbar
sagittal alignment produced by different positions on
routinely used
spinal operating tables.
SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Earlier studies have
documented the advantages of
the knee-chest position in lumbar decompressive procedures.
When simultaneous fusion is
performed and augmented with internal fixation, intraoperative
position is the critical
determinant of sagittal plane balance. Other investigators
have documented
an association between the
knee-chest position and decreased lumbar lordosis. METHODS:
Ten
asymptomatic volunteers
underwent a series of four lateral lumbar radiographs, as
follows:
standing, prone on the Jackson
(Orthopaedic Systems, Inc., Hayword, CA) spinal table, and
prone on the Andrews
(Orthopaedic Systems, Inc.) table with the hips flexed 60
degrees and 90
degrees, respectively.
Intervertebral body angle measurements were obtained from L1
to S1.
Lordosis values were compared
and analyzed for each of the positions. Standing lordosis was
assumed to be physiologic.
RESULTS: Physiologic lordosis values were produced only on the
Jackson operative table. Both
positions on the Andrews table resulted in a statistically
significant
decrease in lumbar lordosis.
Decreasing hip flexion on the Andrews table from 90 degrees to
60
degrees produced a
statistically significant increase in lumbar lordosis.
However, this change did
not reproduce physiologic
values. CONCLUSION: When instrumentation is used to augment
lumbar fusions, positions
incorporating hip flexion should be avoided to ensure
maintenance of
sagittal plane balance.
##20 Failure of magnetic
resonance imaging to reveal the cause of a progressive
cervical myelopathy related to postoperative spinal deformity:
a case report.
Stein J
Am J Phys Med Rehabil 1997
Jan-Feb;76(1):73-5
Spaulding Rehabilitation
Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, USA.
Imaging studies have achieved
a high degree of diagnostic accuracy for many disorders of the
spinal cord but have
significant limitations. We report on the case of a 49-yr-old
man who
developed neck pain and arm
numbness. He was found to have extensive cervical spondylosis,
with spinal cord impingement
at C3-4 and cervical radiculopathy. He underwent a C3-7
laminectomy, with transient
improvement in his symptoms. During the ensuing year, he
developed
increased weakness of the
upper limbs, evidence of cervical myelopathy, and a severely
flexed
posture of the cervical spine.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed cervical spinal cord
atrophy but no evidence of
extrinsic spinal cord compression. Cervical flexion and
extension films
revealed reversal of the
normal cervical lordosis without segmental instability.
Despite the
absence of confirmatory
radiologic studies, the patient was felt to have clinical
evidence of
intermittent compression of
his cervical spinal cord attributable to excessive cervical
kyphosis,
was provided with a cervical
collar, and subsequently underwent surgical stabilization. His
cervical myelopathy showed
marked improvement with these treatments. We conclude that
intermittent compression of
the spinal cord, occurring in the erect position, was not
apparent on
the MRI films obtained in the
supine position. Flexion and extension films, obtained in the
upright
position, documented his
abnormal cervical anatomy but did not reveal substantial
segmental
instability. Spinal deformity
without segmental instability may cause cervical myelopathy
after
multilevel cervical
laminectomies without evidence of extrinsic compression on
MRI.
The possibility of creating
lordosis and correcting scoliosis simultaneously after
partial disc removal. Balance lines of lumbar motion segments.
Ogon M, Haid C, Krismer M,
Jesenko R, Wimmer C
Spine 1996 Nov
1;21(21):2458-62
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, University of Innsbruck, Austria.
STUDY DESIGN: The feasibility
of correcting scoliosis and creating lordosis simultaneously
in
the thoracolumbar and lumbar
spine by anterior instrumentation was investigated by in vitro
testing. OBJECTIVES: To
evaluate the vertebral zones in which a compressive load
applied in a
motion segment creates side
bending and lordosis in intact motion segments and after
partial disc
removal. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND
DATA: Most investigators have observed a
kyphogenic effect of anterior
scoliosis instrumentation and recommended dorsal placement of
screws and the use of wedge
grafts, although wedge grafts were not used routinely by all
surgeons. METHODS: Zones of
lordosization and side bending were determined by evaluation
of balance lines between
extension-flexion and side bending, respectively, by axial
loading on
ligamentous human motion
segments with intact discs and after partial disc removal.
RESULTS:In
lumbar motion segments with
intact discs, it is possible to achieve ipsilateral side
bending and
lordosization by anterior
instrumentation. After partial disc removal, the balance line
between
extension and flexion runs
through the ipsilateral pedicle, and, therefore, a compressive
load
between the vertebral bodies
always creates kyphosis. CONCLUSIONS: After partial disc
removal, it is not possible to
create lordosis and correction of scoliosis simultaneously by
ipsilateral anterior
instrumentation without the use of intervertebral wedge
grafts.
PMID:
8923631, UI: 97082395
###########
Cervical curvature after
laminoplasty for spondylotic myelopathy--involvement of
yellow ligament, semispinalis cervicis muscle, and nuchal
ligament.
Sasai K, Saito T, Akagi S,
Kato I, Ogawa R
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, Kansai Medical University, Osaka, Japan.
To assess the consequences of
cervical laminoplasty on postoperative lordosis, a
retrospective
radiographic analysis of 31
patients undergoing laminoplasty for spondylotic myelopathy
was
completed. Special attention
was paid to lordotic changes occurring at each level over more
than
2 years. Preoperative lordosis
remained unchanged with the patients wearing a cervical
orthosis 1
week postoperatively. However
the lordosis subsequently demonstrated a significant decrease
in
87% of patients over an
average of 3.1 years. Lordotic alignment at C2-C3 and C6-C7
before
surgery significantly
decreased in 81% and 58% of patients 1 week postoperatively,
and 84%
and 81% at last follow up,
respectively, while lordotic alignment at other levels pre-
and
postoperatively did not
significantly change. Loss of lordotic alignment was largely
attributed to
detachment of semispinalis
cervicis muscle on C2 and nuchal ligament on C6/C7 with a
posterior
approach and/or section of
yellow ligament at C2-C3.
Spasm or joint dysfunction…you
be the judge….
The straight cervical spine:
does it indicate muscle spasm?
Helliwell PS, Evans PF, Wright
V
J Bone Joint Surg Br 1994
Jan;76(1):103-6
Huddersfield Royal Infirmary,
Leeds, England.
The loss of cervical lordosis
in radiographs of patients presenting with neck pain is
sometimes
ascribed to muscle spasm. We
performed a cross-sectional study of the prevalence of
'straight'
cervical spines in three
populations: 83 patients presenting to an accident department
with acute
neck pain, 83 referred to a
radiology department with chronic neck problems, and 80
radiographs from a normal
population survey carried out in 1958. Curvature was assessed
on
lateral radiographs both
subjectively and by measurement. The prevalence of 'straight'
cervical
spines was 19% in the acute
cases and 26% in the chronic cases. The 95% confidence
interval
for the difference was -6.4%
to +19.3%. In the normal population 42% showed a straight
spine,
but a further third of these
films had been taken in a position of cervical kyphosis; this
probably
reflects a difference in
positioning technique. Women were more likely than men to have
a straight
cervical spine, with an odds
ratio of 2.81 (95% CI 1.23 to 6.44).>>>>>> Our results fail to
support the
hypothesis that loss of
cervical lordosis reflects muscle spasm caused by pain in the
neck.
Saggital changes from
radiographic positioning? Or does the saggital configuration
remain consistent?
You be the judge….
Effect of patient position on
the sagittal-plane profile of the thoracolumbar spine.
Wood KB, Kos P, Schendel M,
Persson K
J Spinal Disord 1996
Apr;9(2):165-9
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis 55455, USA.
Although the normal sagittal
profile of the thoracolumbar spine has been described, this
has been
obtained primarily by using
young individuals standing. >>>>>>We sought to describe the
sagittal profile
of the thoracolumbar spine in
an older population in the supine cross-table lateral position
compared with that standing.
We enrolled 50 volunteers with no history of back pain or
spine
deformity and 50 matched
subjects with mechanical back pain (LBP) only. Lateral
radiographs
of the thoracolumbar spine
(T10-S1) in both standing and cross-table supine positions
were
obtained. Lordosis from L1
to S1, kyphosis from T10 to L1, >>>>> and the changes seen
moving from
the supine position to
standing were calculated. >>>>>There were few differences
comparing the two
groups in either the standing
or cross-table supine position, or when changing positions.
Within
each group, however, there
were small, but significant, differences in the midlumbar and
thoracolumbar spine when
comparing supine versus standing. Both asymptomatic
individuals and
those with a history of LBP
demonstrated similar small but statistically significant
increases in
lumbar lordosis and
thoracolumbar kyphosis when standing versus supine. The
clinical
significance of these
findings remains to be determined.
Can radiographic mensuration
be used as an outcome? You be the judge…..
Apophysial joint degeneration,
disc degeneration, and sagittal curve of the cervical spine.
Can they be measured reliably on radiographs?
Cote P, Cassidy JD, Yong-Hing
K, Sibley J, Loewy J
Spine 1997 Apr
15;22(8):859-64
Division of Orthopaedics,
University of Saskatchewan, Canada.
STUDY DESIGN: Interexaminer
reliability study. OBJECTIVES: To determine the reliability of
grading apophysial joint and
disc degenerative changes and the reliability of measuring
sagittal
curves on lateral cervical
spine radiographs. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Several
authors have proposed that the
presented of degenerative changes and the absence of lordosis
in
the cervical spine are
indicators of poor recovery from neck injuries caused by motor
vehicle
collisions. The validity of
those conclusions is questionable because the reliability of
the methods
used in their studies to
measure the presence of degenerative changes and the absence
of lordosis
has not been determined.
METHODS: Kellgren's classification system for apophysial joint
and
disc degeneration, as well as
the pattern and magnitude of the sagittal curve on 30 lateral
cervical
spine radiographs were
assessed independently by three examiners. RESULTS: Moderate
reliability was demonstrated
for classifying apophysial joint degeneration with an
intraclass
correlation coefficient of
0.45 (95% confidence interval, 0.09-0.71). Classifying
degenerative
disc disease had substantial
reliability, with an intraclass correlation coefficient of
0.71 (95%
confidence interval,
0.23-0.88). Measuring the magnitude of the sagittal curve from
C2 to C7
had excellent interexaminer
agreement, with an intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.96
(95%
confidence interval,
0.88-0.98) and an interexaminer error of 8.3 degrees.>>>>
CONCLUSIONS:
The classification system for
degenerative disc disease proposed by Kellgren et al and the
method of measurement of
sagittal curves from C2 to C7 demonstrated an acceptable level
of
reliability and can be used in
outcomes research.
A]Do manipulations and
specific adjustive procedures produce different outcomes in
spinal configuration?
You be the judge…..
B] Does the spine change all
by itself???
An evaluation of the effect of
chiropractic manipulative therapy on hypolordosis of the
cervical spine.
Leach RA
J Manipulative Physiol Ther
1983 Mar;6(1):17-23
Cervical curve depth (CCD) was
radiographically evaluated in 35 patients who presented with
cervical hypolordosis or
kyphosis (CH/K). Of these, one group of 20 patients received
chiropractic manipulative
therapy (CMT) for the purpose of correcting the disorder. A
second
group of nine patients
received both CMT and an orthopedic cervical pillow for in
home
correction of the CH/K. A
control group of six patients received CMT which was not
intended
to correct the CH/K. The
purpose of the study was to determine the efficacy of CMT in
the
correction of CH/K.
>>>>>Analysis of the data indicated that CMT is significantly
effective in the
treatment of CH/K. There was a
mean improvement of 4.55 degrees (p less than 0.01) in the
group receiving only CMT, as
assessed by CCD radiographic analysis. There was also
significant
improvement of 2.22 degrees (p
less than 0.05) in the group receiving both CMT and orthopedic
cervical pillow therapy. The
findings lend support to fundamental chiropractic tenets such
as that
spinal manipulation is
beneficial in correcting biomechanical disorders of the spine.
Specifically,
the study documents the role
of chiropractic care in the correction of CH/K as may result
from
postural, musculoligamentous,
or traumatic etiology such as the so-called "whiplash" injury.
Want a human experimental
study, lets thank our friends the surgeons….. (we couldn’t ask
for a better study if we did it ourselves)
Axial symptoms and cervical
alignments after cervical anterior spinal fusion for patients
with cervical myelopathy.
Kawakami M, Tamaki T, Yoshida
M, Hayashi N, Ando M, Yamada H
J Spinal Disord 1999
Feb;12(1):50-6
Department of Orthopedic
Surgery, Wakayama Medical College, Wakayama City, Japan.
This retrospective clinical
study was designed to examine the relation between cervical
alignment
and axial symptoms developing
after cervical anterior spinal fusion. Sixty patients with
myelopathy treated with
cervical anterior spinal fusion were reviewed. For
radiographic
evaluation, lordosis,
enlargement of the fused segments and neural foramen,
radiographic union,
and degeneration of adjacent
segment were reviewed before or after surgery or both.
Twenty-three patients had
axial symptoms. >>>>Only local kyphosis and narrowing of the
neural
foramen at the fused segment
were recognized more often in patients with axial symptoms
than in
those without such symptoms.
>>>>> No less than 2 mm and < or = 5 mm in enlargement of the
anterior
disc space immediately after
surgery resulted in maintenance of cervical lordosis. These
findings
suggest that > or = 2 mm and <
or = 5 mm in enlargement of anterior vertebral body height
during operation results in
prevention of axial symptoms.
Restoring lordois, is it
important? What do the surgeons say????
The role of lordosis.
Beckers L, Bekaert J
Acta Orthop Belg 1991;57
Suppl 1:198-202
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, Imeldaziekenhuis, Bonheiden, Belgium.
A majority of degenerative
changes in the vertebral discs, the facet joints or even the
interspinous
ligaments, as in Baastrup's
disease, are probably caused by pressure damage. Among the
various
causes of overloading,
hyperlordosis--alone or in combination with other adjuvant
causes--is
presumably the most important
one. Its detrimental influence is most noticeable in some
peculiar
situations, where lordosis is
the common denominator of malformations of different origins,
as, for
instance, dorsal and
dorsolumbar kyphosis, L4-5 facetarthrosis with L5-S1
spondylolisthesis,
and posterior or
posterolateral distraction arthrodesis. >>>>>It is now
recognized that arthrodesis in the
lumbar spine should be done in
normal lordosis or even slight hyperlordosis in order to
respect,
or even to improve the stress
distribution in the mobile segments. After lumbosacral
arthrodesis,
as well as in common
"everyday" low back pain problems, protection of the disks and
facet joints
from prolonged continuous
loading is essential for the prevention of continuing
degeneration.
Cervical curvature in acute
whiplash injuries: prospective comparative study with
asymptomatic subjects.
Matsumoto M, Fujimura Y,
Suzuki N, Toyama Y, Shiga H
Injury 1998 Dec;29(10):775-8
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, School of Medicine, Keio University, Tokyo, Japan.
The cervical curvature of 488
patients with acute whiplash injury was prospectively studied
by
comparison with 495
asymptomatic healthy volunteers. Plain radiography of the
cervical spine in
the neutral position was
evaluated qualitatively. No significant difference was noted
in frequencies
of non-lordotic cervical
curvature and local angular kyphosis between acute whiplash
injury
patients and asymptomatic
subjects. No significant association was apparent between
clinical
symptoms and cervical
curvature. These results suggest that non-lordotic cervical
curvature and
angular kyphosis in acute
whiplash injury patients constitute normal variants rather
than
pathological findings.
Neuroradiology 1997
Jan;39(1):35-40
MRI of
car occupants with whiplash injury.
Voyvodic F, Dolinis J, Moore VM, Ryan GA, Slavotinek JP,
Whyte AM, Hoile RD,
Taylor
GW
National Injury Surveillance Unit, Bedford Park, South
Australia.
Our purpose was to document
and investigate the prognostic significance of features seen
on
MRI of patients with whiplash
injury following relatively minor road traffic crashes. MRI
was
obtained shortly and at 6
months after the crash using a 0.5 T imager. The images were
assessed
independently by two
radiologists for evidence of fracture or other injury; loss of
lordosis and
spondylosis were also
recorded. Clinical examinations were used to assess the status
of patients
initially and at 6 months. The
results of the independent MRI and clinical investigations
were then
examined for association using
statistical tests. Initial MRI was performed on 29 patients,
of
whom 19 had repeat studies at
6 months; 48 examinations were thus examined. Apart from
spondylosis and loss of
lordosis, only one abnormality was detected: an intramedullary
lesion
consistent with a small cyst
or syrinx. There were no statistically significant
associations between
the outcome of injury and
spondylosis or loss of lordosis. No significant changes were
found
when comparing the initial
and follow-up MRI. It appears that MRI of patients with
relatively less
severe whiplash symptoms
reveals a low frequency of abnormalities, apart from
spondylosis and
loss of lordosis, which
have little short-term prognostic value. Routine investigation
of such
patients with MRI is not
justified in view of the infrequency of abnormalities
detected, the lack of
prognostic value and the
high cost of the procedure.
Skeletal Radiol 1995
May;24(4):263-6
Hyperextension strain or "whiplash" injuries to the cervical
spine.
Griffiths HJ, Olson PN, Everson LI, Winemiller M
Department of Radiology,
University of Minnesota Hospital and Clinical, Minneapolis
55455, USA.
PURPOSE. To define
"whiplash" radiologically. MATERIAL AND METHODS. A full
cervical
spine radiographic series
(including flexion and extension views) was reviewed in 40
patients with
clinically proven "whiplash"
injuries and compared to the radiographs in 105 normal
controls. The
level and degree of kinking or
kyphosis, subluxation, and the difference in the amount of
fanning
between spinous processes on
flexion and extension films were measured in each patient.
RESULTS. Localized kinking
greater than 10 degrees and over 12 mm of fanning, often
occurring at the level below
the kinking or kyphosis, occurred mainly in the group of
whiplash
patients (sensitivity 81%,
specificity 76%, accuracy 80%). CONCLUSIONS. Localized kinking
greater than 10 degrees and
fanning greater than 12 mm are useful measurements by which to
separate patients with true
whiplash injuries from those with minor ligamentous tears.
Flexion and
extension views are
essential to help define whiplash and other ligamentous
injuries of the cervical
spine.
Ability to reproduce head
position after whiplash injury.
Loudon JK, Ruhl M, Field E
Spine 1997 Apr 15;22(8):865-8
Department of Physical
Therapy Education, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas
City,
USA.
STUDY DESIGN: A two-group
design with repeated measures. OBJECTIVES: To determine if
there is loss of the ability
to reproduce target position of the cervical spine individuals
who have
sustained a whiplash injury.
SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: The ability to sense
position is a prerequisite
for functional movement. Injury may have a deleterious effect
on this
ability, resulting in
inaccurate positioning of the head and neck with respect to
the body
coordinates and to the
environment. METHODS: Eleven subjects with history of whiplash
injury
(age, 42 +/- 8.7 years) and
11 age-matched asymptomatic subjects (age, 43 +/- 3.1 years)
participated in the study.
Effects of whiplash injury on the ability to replicate a
target position of
the head were assessed.
Maximum rotation of the neck and ability to reproduce the
target angle
were measured using a
standard cervical range-of-motion device. Subjects' perception
of
"neutral" position was also
assessed. RESULTS: Analysis of variance indicated the whiplash
subjects were less accurate
in reproducing the target angle than were control subjects.
These
whiplash subjects tended to
overshoot the target. In addition, the subjects in the
whiplash group
were often inaccurate in
their assessment of neutral position. CONCLUSIONS: Subjects
who
have experienced a whiplash
injury demonstrate a deficit in their ability to reproduce a
target
position of the neck. These
data are consistent with the hypothesis that these subjects
possess an
inaccurate perception of
head position secondary to their injury. This study has
implications for
the rehabilitation of
individuals with whiplash injury.
The influence of lordosis on
axial trunk torque and trunk muscle myoelectric activity.
McGill SM
Spine 1992 Oct;17(10):1187-93
Department of Kinesiology, University of Waterloo, Ontario,
Canada.
Force contributions from the
facet complex and posterior ligaments during the generation of
axial
torque are a function of
lordosis, and it has been speculated that these forces
together with
muscular contributions play
a role in axial trunk twisting. This study investigated the
electromyographic activity of
the trunk musculature and torque-generating capacity of the
lumbar
spine under the conditions of
normal lordosis, hyperlordosis, and hypolordosis. Eleven male
subjects volunteered for
this study. The subjects performed isometric twisting efforts
and
maximum dynamic twisting
efforts at 30 degrees/sec. The myoelectric activity levels
(normalized
to maximal amplitude obtained
from nontwist activities) were quite low despite maximal
efforts to
generate axial torque (for
example: approximately 60% maximum voluntary contraction for
latissimus dorsi and even
lower for the abdominals). Furthermore, changes in lordosis
did not
produce any consistent
changes in muscle activity, although a hyperlordotic spine
produced
significantly smaller axial
torques, and a hypolordotic spine smaller still. Larger
torques were
measured during all three
conditions of lordosis, as the subjects rotated toward an
untwisted
position, and lower torques
as the subjects rotated away. The opposite trend was observed,
however, in myoelectric
activity of the agonistic side of latissimus dorsi, the
thoracic level of
erector spine, and the
lumbar level of erector spinae, i.e., larger amplitudes were
observed as the
trunk was twisted away from
the untwisted position. These data suggest that tissues other
than
muscle (i.e., passive
tissue) contribute significantly to axial torque production
and that the flexed
and twisted spine is less
able to resist applied axial torques, possibly increasing the
risk of
torsional injury.
Segmental analysis of the
sagittal plane alignment of the normal thoracic and lumbar
spines and thoracolumbar junction.
Bernhardt M, Bridwell KH
Spine 1989 Jul;14(7):717-21
Department of Surgery, University of Kansas School of
Medicine, Wichita.
Recent advances in spinal
instrumentation have brought about a new emphasis on the
three-dimensional spinal
deformity of scoliosis and especially on the restoration of
normal sagittal
plane contours. Normal
alignment in the coronal and transverse planes is easily
defined; however,
normal sagittal plane
alignment is not so simple. This retrospective study was
undertaken to
increase the understanding of
the normal alignment of the spine in the sagittal plane, with
a special
emphasis on the
thoracolumbar junction. Measurements were made from the
lateral radiographs
of 102 subjects with
clinically and radiographically normal spines. Cobb
measurements of the
thoracic kyphosis (T3-T12),
the thoracolumbar junction (T10-T12 and T12-L2), and the
lumbar
lordosis (L1-L5) were
determined. The spices of the thoracic kyphosis and lumbar
lordosis also
were determined. Using a
computerized digitalizing table, the segmental angulation was
determined at each level from
T1-2 to L5-S1. In conclusion, there is a wide range of normal
sagittal alignment of the
thoracic and lumbar spines. When using composite measurements
of the
combined frontal and sagittal
plane deformity of scoliosis, this wide range of sagittal
variance
should be taken into
consideration. Using norms established here for segmental
alignment, areas
of hypokyphosis and
hypolordosis commonly seen in scoliosis can be more
objectively evaluated.
The thoracolumbar junction is
for all practical purposes straight; lumbar lordosis usually
starts at
L1-2 and gradually
increases at each level caudally to the sacrum.
Erector spinae lever arm
length variations with changes in spinal curvature.
Tveit P, Daggfeldt K, Hetland
S, Thorstensson A
Spine 1994 Jan
15;19(2):199-204
Department of Physiology III,
Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
Magnetic resonance imaging was
used to study the effect of different curvatures in the lumbar
spine on lever arm lengths of
the erector spinae musculature. Eleven subjects were
instructed to
simulate static lifts while
lying supine in a magnetic resonance camera with the lumbar
spine either
in kyphosis or lordosis. A
sagittal image of the spine was obtained to analyze the
lumbosacral
angle and to guide the imaging
of transverse sections through each disc (L1/L2 to L5/S1).
Images
were analyzed for lever arm
lengths of the erector spinae muscle (ES) and the erector
spinae
aponeurosis (ESA), the latter
functioning as a tendon for superiorly positioned ES muscle
portions. The lumbosacral
angle (between superior surfaces of S1 and L4) averaged 44
degrees
in the lordosed, 26 degrees in
the kyphosed and 41 degrees in a neutral supine position. In
lordosis, the lever arm
lengths were significantly longer than in kyphosis for all
levels, averaging
60-63 mm (ES) and 82-86 mm
(ESA). The corresponding values for kyphosis were 49-57 mm
(ES) and 67-77 mm (ESA),
respectively. Thus, there was a considerable effect (10-24%)
of
lumbar curvature on lever arm
lengths for the back extensor muscles. The change in leverage
will
affect the need for extensor
muscle force and thus the magnitude of compression in the
lumbar
spine in loading situations
such as lifting.
Commonly adopted postures
and their effect on the lumbar spine.
Dolan P, Adams MA, Hutton WC
Spine 1988 Feb;13(2):197-201
Polytechnic of Central
London, England.
The activity of the erector
spinae muscles and the changes in lumbar curvature were
measured in
11 subjects in a range of
commonly adopted postures to see if there were any consistent
trends.
Surface electrodes were used
to measure back muscle activity and lumbar curvature was
measured using electronic
inclinometers. The results showed that many commonly adopted
postures reduced the lumbar
lordosis when compared with erect standing or sitting, even at
the
expense of increasing the
back muscle activity.
The effects of flexion on
the geometry and actions of the lumbar erector spinae.
Macintosh JE, Bogduk N, Pearcy
MJ
Spine 1993 Jun 1;18(7):884-93
Faculty of Medicine,
University of Newcastle, Australia.
A modeling study was
undertaken to determine the effects of flexion on the forces
exerted by the
lumbar back muscles.
Twenty-nine fascicles of the lumbar multifidus and erector
spinae were
plotted onto tracings of
radiographs of nine normal volunteers in the flexion position.
Moment
arms and force vectors of each
fascicle were calculated. The model revealed that moment arms
decreased slightly in length
resulting in no more than an 18% decrease in maximum extensor
moments exerted across the
lumbar spine. Compression loads were not significantly
different
from those generated in the
upright posture. However, there were major changes in shear
forces,
in particular a reversal
from a net anterior to a net posterior shear force at the
L5/S1 segment.
Flexion causes substantial
elongation of the back muscles, which must therefore reduce
their
maximum active tension.
However, if increases in passive tension are considered it
emerges that
the compression forces and
moments exerted by the back muscles in full flexion are not
significantly different from
those produced in the upright posture.
Erector spinae activation and
movement dynamics about the lumbar spine in lordotic and
kyphotic squat-lifting.
Holmes JA, Damaser MS, Lehman
SL
Spine 1992 Mar;17(3):327-34
Department of Physical Education, University of California,
Berkeley.
Activation of the erector
spinae during squat lifts depends on the initial posture of
the lumbar
spine. The authors assessed
erector spinae activation by electromyography during squat
lifts from
lordotic and kyphotic
postures, measured kinematics of the lifts from digitized
video images, and
inferred torques from the
kinematics, using a two-dimensional model of a human lifting
in the
sagittal plane, with a joint
at L3. Lifts from the lordotic initial posture had peak
electromyographic
signals early in the lift,
whereas lifts from kyphotic initial posture had an initial
"flexor relaxation,"
and peak activity in the
middle of the lift. Lumbar flexion was much greater in lifts
from kyphotic
initial position. Torques
required about L3 were similar between the two postures,
though
somewhat larger initially in
lifts from kyphosis. The largest torques were therefore
sustained by
flexed lumbar spines, during
periods of little or no erector spinae activity, in lifts made
from
kyphotic initial position. A
sizable portion of the early torque is inertial, and therefore
strongly
dependent on movement time.
Movements with a 30-lb load in the hands were similar, in
kinematics and
electromyography, to unloaded lifts, though longer in
duration. The clinical
implications of the
differences in activation with posture, the practical
implications of the inertial
component of torque, and the
need for consideration of lumbar posture in future modeling of
squat lifting are discussed.
Lumbar lordosis. Effects of
sitting and standing
Lord MJ, Small JM, Dinsay
JM, Watkins RG
. Spine 1997 Nov
1;22(21):2571-4
Kerlan-Jobe Orthopaedic Clinic, Inglewood, California, USA.
STUDY DESIGN: The effect of
sitting versus standing posture on lumbar lordosis was studied
retrospectively by
radiographic analysis of 109 patients with low back pain.
OBJECTIVE: To
document changes in
segmental and total lumbar lordosis between sitting and
standing
radiographs. SUMMARY OF
BACKGROUND DATA: Preservation of physiologic lumbar
lordosis is an important
consideration when performing fusion of the lumbar spine. The
appropriate degree of lumbar
lordosis has not been defined. METHODS: Total and segmental
lumbar lordosis from L1 to
S1 was assessed by an independent observer using the Cobb
angle
measurements of the lateral
radiographs of the lumbar spine obtained with the patient in
the sitting
and standing positions.
RESULTS: Lumbar lordosis averaged 49 degrees standing and 34
degrees sitting from L1 to S1,
47 degrees standing and 33 degrees sitting from L2 to S1, 31
degrees standing and 22
degrees sitting from L4 to S1, and 18 degrees standing and 15
degrees
sitting from L5 to S1.
CONCLUSION: Lumbar lordosis while standing was nearly 50%
greater
on average than sitting
lumbar lordosis. The clinical significance of this data may
pertain to: 1) the
known correlation of
increased intradiscal pressure with sitting, which may be
caused by this
decrease in lordosis; 2) the
benefit of a sitting lumbar support that increases lordosis;
and 3) the
consideration of an
appropriate degree of lordosis in fusion of the lumbar spine.
Effect of lumbar posture on
lifting.
Hart DL, Stobbe TJ,
Jaraiedi M
Spine 1987 Mar;12(2):138-45
Twenty laborers assumed
specific lumbar spine postures and lifted a 157 N crate to
three
different hand heights to
determine if lumbar spine flexion moments or trunk muscle
activity were
affected by the lifting
postures. Lumbar flexion moments were lowest when the workers
used the
lordotic and straight back
postures, while the average erector spinae muscle activity
tended to be
highest in the lordotic and
straight back postures. The kypohotic posture regularly
reduced the
activity of the erector
spinae to bursts of activity while lifting and caused more
discomfort during
the lifting tasks than any
other posture. Therefore, the lumbar lordotic posture is
recommended as
the posture of choice while
lifting, particularly when lifting from the floor level.
***************
Sagittal profiles of the
spine.
Voutsinas SA, MacEwen GD
Clin Orthop 1986
Sep;(210):235-42
The sagittal plane of the
growing spine was studied from standardized radiographs of 670
normal
subjects to establish
standards of reference for thoracic kyphosis, lumbosacral
lordosis, and
sacral inclination. Cobb's
method of measuring spinal deformities was compared with new
indices
of kyphosis and lordosis
that take into consideration the length and width of each
curve. Boys
and girls had comparable
degrees of kyphosis. Although girls initially had higher
degrees of
lordosis and sacral
inclination, by maturity these measurements were similar in
both sexes.
Significant correlations
were found between kyphosis and lordosis and between lordosis
and
sacral inclination, indicating
that these curvatures tend to balance each other.
On neck muscle activity and
load reduction in sitting postures. An electromyographic and
biomechanical study with applications in ergonomics and
rehabilitation.
Schuldt K
Scand J Rehabil Med Suppl
1988;19:1-49
Department of Physical
Medicine and Rehabilitation Karolinska Institute, Stockholm,
Sweden.
In this study of the
biomechanics and muscular function of the cervical spine,
skilled women
workers simulated standardized
electromechanical assembly work in eight sitting postures.
Normalized electromyography
was used to quantify activity in neck-and-shoulder muscles.
With
the whole spine flexed, muscle
activity in the cervical erector spinae, trapezius and
thoracic
erector spinae muscles was
higher than when the whole spine was straight and vertical.
The
posture with the trunk
slightly inclined backward and neck vertical gave the lowest
activity levels.
Flexed neck compared to
vertical neck gave higher activity in the cervical erector
spinae. Work
with abducted arm gave high
neck muscle activity. Work postures can thus be optimized to
diminish neck muscle load.
Two ergonomic acids were studied during the work cycle. Elbow
support reduced the activity
in the trapezius and thoracic erector spinae/rhomboids muscles
in the
posture with the whole spine
flexed and in the posture with the whole spine vertical. Arm
suspension gave mainly
similar reduction in these postures, and also a reduction in
the cervical
erector spinae. In the
position with the trunk slightly inclined backward, arm
suspension gave a
reduction in the trapezius.
These findings indicate that arm support or arm suspension can
be used
to reduce neck muscle load.
Three methodological studies related to neck muscle load and
normalization were included.
1) Examination of the effect of different isometric maximum
test
contractions on neck muscles
showed that all contractions activated all muscles studied,
including
those on the contralateral
side, to some extent and at various levels. The highest
frequency of
attained maximum levels
was: for neck extension, in cervical erector spinae; for
cervical spinae
lateral flexion, in splenius
and levator scapulae; for arm abduction, in trapezius, and,
for shoulder
elevation and scapular
retraction/elevation, in thoracic erector spinae/rhomboids.
Proximal
resistance gave higher
activity than distal. 2) The relationship between EMG activity
and muscular
moment was studied in women
during submaximal and maximum isometric neck extension. The
relationship found was
non-linear, with greater increase in activity at high moments
in the
posterior neck muscles
studied. The slightly flexed cervical spine position induced a
higher level
of activity in erector
spinae cervicalis than did the neutral position for a given
relative muscular
moment. 3) Muscular activity
was related to cervical spine position during maximum
isometric
neck extension. Peak
activity in the cervical erector spinae was found in the
slightly flexed
lower-cervical spine
position.
[A new surgical treatment for
syringomyelia, scoliosis, Arnold-Chiari
malformation, kinking of the
brainstem, odontoid recess, idiopathic basilar
impression and platybasia].
[Article in Spanish]
Royo-Salvador MB
1: Rev Neurol 1997
Apr;25(140):523-30
Servicio de Neurocirugia,
Clinica Tres Torres, Barcelona, Jefe del, Espana.
INTRODUCTION: Based on
medullary traction as responsible for idiopathic
syringomyelia (SMI),
idiopathic scoliosis (ESCID), Arnold Chiari malformation
(ARCH), platybasia (PTB),
basilar impression (IMB), odontoid recess (RTO)
kinking of the brain stem
(KTC) and considering the medullary traction to be
transmitted by the filum
terminale (FT), a surgical technique for the section of
FT (SFT) is described in three
cases of SMI, one of ESCID, and one of ARCH with
no lumbar dysraphia. MATERIAL
AND METHODS: A 34-year-old woman with
cervico-brachialgias,
paresthesias, bilateral babinski and a centro-medullary
cavity C3-C7. A 26-year-old
male with cervico-brachialgias, hypoestesia in left
hemybody, and cervicobulbar
cavity. A 19-year-old female with ESCID since the
age of 14th, with episodes of
reacuting, and 38o of dorsolumbar curvature. A
67-year-old woman with intense
headache, hypoesthesia of the hands, paraparesia
and ARCH. A 23-year-old man
with marked tetraparesia, bilateral babinski,
anesthesia of both legs, SMI,
ESCID, ARCH and hydrocephaly. RESULTS: After SFT:
in the SMIs the
thermo-algesic, disesthetic and algic dissociation
disappeared.
In ESCID there was a reduction
to 31o in the curvature in nine months. On ARCH
the headaches ceased and there
was recovery of touch and paraparesia.
CONCLUSIONS: SFT is a useful
etiological treatment for SMI, ESCID, ARCH. Also,
in ESCID it is possible to
avoid stress on the medulla due to its surgical
reduction.
PMID: 9172910, UI: 97287994
Sagittal alignment in
lumbosacral fusion: relations between radiological parameters
and pain
J-Y. Lazennec, S. Ramaré, N.
Arafati, C. G. Laudet, M. Gorin, B. Roger, S. Hansen, G.
Saillant, L. Maurs, R.
Trabelsi
European Spine Journal Volume
9 Issue 1 (2000) pp 47-55
Service de Chirurgie
Orthopédique et Traumatologique, Hôpital Pitie-Salpetrière 83,
Boulevard de l'Hôpital,
F-75013 Paris, France (Tel.: +33-1-42 17 70 61, Fax: +33-1-42
17 70 62)
(2) Department of
Anatomy, Faculty of the Pitié-Salpetrière Hospital, Paris,
France
(3) Clinique
Radiologique, Paris, France
(4) Central Radiology
Department, Pitié-Salpetrière Hospital, Paris, France
(5) Pr Lyon-Caen et
Agid Neurological Department, Salpetrière Hospital, Paris,
France
Received: 21 January
1999/Revised: 28 July 1999/Accepted: 17 September 1999
Abstract The objective
of this study was to conduct a radiological analysis of
posture
before and after
lumbosacral fusion to evaluate the influence of spinal
alignment on the
occurrence and pattern
of post surgical pain. The study included 81 patients, of whom
51
had a history of
previous low back surgery. We excluded patients with suspected
or
confirmed nonunion. In
the fusion group, the 27 patients who were pain free
after the procedure were compared to the 54 patients with
residual pain. Thirty patients had pain only or primarily when
they were standing immobile, 18 when they were sitting
immobile, and six in both positions. Measurements were done
on full-length lateral radiographs of the spine, with the
patient standing according to Duval
Beaupère criteria. The
subgroup with postfusion pain was characterized at baseline by
a
more vertical sacrum
with less sacral tilt (ST) (P < 0.0062) and more pelvic tilt
(PT) (P < 0.0160). PT at last follow-up (PT fu) correlated
with the presence of postfusion pain (NP: P = 0.0003). In the
patients with postfusion pain, PT was almost twice the normal
value. ST at last follow-up (ST fu) in the
standing position was
also correlated with the presence of postfusion pain (P <
0.0001)
indicating that the
sacrum remained abnormally vertical in the subjects with
postfusion pain. Using logistic regression, the only
prognostic factor for residual pain at last follow-up was ST
fu. Both at pre-operative evaluation and at last follow-up,
patients with pain in the standing position or in both the
standing and sitting
positions were characterized at pre-operative status by a more
vertical
sacrum with less sacral
tilt. The results of this study indicate that, achieving a
strong fusion
should not be the only
goal. Appropriate position of the fused vertebrae is also of
paramount importance to
minimize muscle work during posture maintenance. The main risk
is failing to correct
or to causing excessive pelvic retroversion with a vertical
sacrum leading
to a sagittal alignment
that replicates the sitting position. This situation is often
accompanied
by loss of lumbar
lordosis and adversely affects stiff or degenerative hips.
Key words Sacroiliac
joint · Lumbosacral fusion · Spinal alignment
European Spine Journal
Volume 8 Issue 6 (1999) pp 426-428
review: Why the back of
the child?
X. Phélip
Department of
Rheumatology, University Hospital of Grenoble, BP 217, F-38043
Grenoble Cedex, France
e-mail: xavier.phelip@ujf-grenoble.fr, Fax: +33-4 76 76 56 02
Received: 5 August 1999
Accepted: 18 August 1999
Abstract An
international congress about "the back of children and
teenagers and the
prevention of backache"
was held in March 1999 in Grenoble (France). Beside specific
low back pain following
progressive and growth diseases, special attention was paid to
non-specific low back
pain (LBP). Some epidemiological data show a high incidence of
LBP during and after
the rapid growth phase, with the concomitant possibility of
continued
or recurrent evolution.
MRI studies reveal frequent signs of disc degeneration: they
start
after the growth phase,
spread during adolescence and are often correlated with
backache.
An immunohistological
study seems to confirm the presence of degenerative-type
alterations and changes
in collagen in the vertebral plates and nucleus of juvenile
spine.
These data must be
confirmed, and their relation to natural history and prognosis
of juvenile
LBP have to be
clarified by longitudinal studies.
Low back pain in a
population of school children
R. Gunzburg (1), F.
Balagué (2), M. Nordin (3), M. Szpalski (4), D. Duyck (5), D.
Bull
(1), C. Mélot (6)
European Spine Journal Volume
8 Issue 6 (1999) p p 439-443
(1) Eeuwfeestkliniek,
Harmoniestraat 68, 2018 Antwerp, Belgium
(2) Fribourg Cantonal
Hospital, Switzerland
(3) Occupational and
Industrial Orthopaedic Center, New York, New York, USA
(4) Molière Longchamps
Hospital, Brussels, Belgium
(5) Medical School
Inspection, Antwerp, Belgium
(6) Erasme University
Hospital, Brussels, Belgium
Received: 7 June 1999
Revised: 23 September 1999 Accepted: 8 November 1999
Abstract A study was
undertaken to analyse the prevalence of low back pain (LBP)
and
confounding factors in
primary school children in the city of Antwerp. A total of 392
children aged 9 were
included in the study. All children completed a validated
three-page
questionnaire and they
all underwent a specific lumbar spine oriented medical
examination
during their annual
routine medical school control. This examination was performed
by the
city school doctors.
The questionnaire was composed of easy "yes/no" questions and
visual
analogue scales.
Statistical analysis was performed using Student's t-test and
chi-squared
test at the
significance level P < 0.05. The prevalence of LBP was high.
No gender
difference was found. A
total of 142 children (36%) reported having suffered at least
one
episode of LBP in their
lives. Of these, 33 (23%) had sought medical help for LBP from
a
doctor or
physiotherapist. Sixty-four percent of children reporting LBP
said that at least
one of their parents
suffered from or complained of LBP. This was significantly
higher than
for the children who
did not report having suffered LBP. The way in which the
school
satchel was carried (in
the hand, on the back) had no bearing on the incidence of LBP.
There was significantly
more LBP in children who reported playing video games for more
than 2 h per day, but
this was not so for television watchers. The visual analogue
scales
concerning general
well-being were all very significantly correlated with
self-reported LBP,
with children who
reported LBP being more tired, less happy, and worse sleepers.
Of the
19 clinical parameters
taken down during the medical examination, only one was
significantly more
prevalent in the group of children reporting LBP: pain on
palpation at the
insertion site on the
iliac crest of the ilio-lumbar ligament. From this study we
can establish
that there are few
clinical signs that can help to single out school children
with LBP.
Key words Low back pain
· Children · Clinical examination · Questionnaire · Prevalence
Posture-related changes of
soleus H-reflex excitability.
Goulart F, Valls-Sole J,
Alvarez R
Muscle Nerve 2000
Jun;23(6):925-32
Departament de Medicina, Institut d'Investigacio Biomedica
August Pi i Sunyer (IDIBAPS),
Facultad de Medicina, Universitat de Barcelona, Villarroel
170, Barcelona 08036, Spain.
We investigated whether the
modulatory effects of segmental and descending inputs on the
soleus
H reflex are modified by
postural conditions. Fourteen healthy volunteers received a
transcranial
magnetic stimulus (TMS) or
percutaneous electrical stimulation of the posterior tibial
nerve
(PTN), preceding by 0 to 400
ms the elicitation of the soleus H reflex in supine, sitting,
and
standing positions. In all
positions, TMS induced an early period of facilitation at
interstimulus
intervals (ISIs) ranging
between 5 and 35 ms. In supine and sitting positions, there
was a second
period of facilitation at ISIs
between 60 and 90 ms, which was absent or significantly
reduced in
the standing position. PTN
induced a strong inhibition of the H reflex in all positions
up to 125
ms. In supine and sitting
positions, inhibition continued up to 400 ms, whereas it was
significantly
reduced or completely absent
beyond 125 ms in the standing position. These results
demonstrate
posture-related differences
in the modulatory effects of descending and segmental inputs
on the
excitability of the H-reflex
circuit. Copyright 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Vestibular perception of
self-rotation in different postures: a comparison between
sitting and standing subjects.
Becker W, Jurgens R, Boss T
Exp Brain Res 2000
Apr;131(4):468-76
Sektion
Neurophysiologie, Universitat Ulm, Germany.
wolfgang.becker@medizin.uni-ulm.de
We investigated whether
posture - either seated (S) or upright standing (O,
orthostatic) - affects
the vestibular perceptions of
angular velocity (V) and displacement (D) in the horizontal
plane.
We also examined whether the
two perceptions are equivalent, that is, whether perceived
displacement can be viewed as
the time integral of perceived velocity. Sinusoidal stimuli
were
delivered to subjects sitting
on a Barany chair or standing on a turning platform.
Frequencies
ranged from 0.028 Hz to 0.45
Hz, peak-to-peak amplitudes from 11.3 degrees to 180 degrees,
and peak velocities from 4
degrees/s to 64 degrees/s. Perceptions were measured by
retrospective magnitude
estimation in relation to a standard stimulus (STD) of 0.11
Hz, 45
degrees, 16 degrees/s. For
D-estimates, two different moduli were assigned to the STD:
Either
"45 degrees" (allowing
subjects to use the familiar degree scale, which can easily be
related to the
body scheme) or "10" (which
bears no relation to an accustomed scale). For V-estimations
the
modulus was always "10"
(there is no "natural" velocity scale). D-estimates exhibited
only a
marginal, non-significant
dependence on posture (S larger than O); they were highly
veridical
(linear function of stimulus
amplitude, gain close to 1) when subjects used the degree
scale but
had a reduced gain
(approximately 0.76) with a modulus of 10. V-estimates, on the
other hand,
varied with posture (S
significantly larger than O), particularly upon presentation
of large stimuli;
also, they deviated
increasingly from veracity as stimulus magnitude increased
(saturating
function). Finally, posture
had no effect upon the vestibular detection threshold. The
frequency
response of D-estimates,
tested with stimuli of constant amplitude and varying
frequency, was
bimodal at low frequencies:
stimuli were either not detected at all or were veridically
estimated,
on average (with a large
scatter, though). The frequency response of V-estimates,
tested with
stimuli of constant peak
velocity, exhibited a continuous increase with stimulation
frequency. We
conclude that published
quantifications of vestibular self-motion perception,
collected mostly with
sitting subjects, are likely
to be applicable also to the more natural situation of
standing subjects
provided they are based on
displacement indications; in contrast, velocity indications
appear to
be modulated by posture. The
different susceptibility of displacement and velocity
estimates to
posture and their
incongruent frequency characteristics suggest that perceived
displacement does
not, or does not always, equal
the time integral of perceived velocity. The persistence of
nearly
veridical displacement
estimates at low frequencies suggests the intervention of
cognitive
processes.
Physical risk factors for neck
pain.
Ariens GA, van Mechelen W,
Bongers PM, Bouter LM, van der Wal G
Scand J Work Environ Health
2000 Feb;26(1):7-19
Department of Social Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Vrije
Universiteit Amsterdam, The
Netherlands. g.ariens@arbeid.tno.nl
To identify physical risk
factors for neck pain, a systematic review of the literature
was carried
out. Based on methodological
quality and study design, 4 levels of evidence were defined to
establish the strength of
evidence for the relationship between risk factors and neck
pain.
Altogether, 22
cross-sectional studies, 2 prospective cohort studies, and 1
case-referent study
were eligible for determining
the level of evidence. The results showed some evidence for a
positive relationship between
neck pain and the duration of sitting and twisting or bending
of the
trunk. A sensitivity
analysis was carried out excluding 3 items of the quality
list, the importance of
which seemed doubtful. On the
basis of this sensitivity analysis, it was concluded that
there is
some evidence for a positive
relationship between neck pain and the following work-related
risk
factors: neck flexion, arm
force, arm posture, duration of sitting, twisting or bending
of the trunk,
hand-arm vibration, and
workplace design.
Sitting balance following
brain injury: does it predict outcome?
Black K, Zafonte R, Millis
S, Desantis N, Harrison-Felix C, Wood D, Mann N
Brain Inj 2000
Feb;14(2):141-52
Department of Physical
Medicine and Rehabilitation, Rehabilitation Institute of
Michigan, Wayne
State
University, Detroit 48201, USA. KBLACK@DMK.org
Balance dysfunction is
commonly observed following traumatic brain injury. There are
many
proposed predictors of
functional outcome in the traumatic brain injury population.
It was
hypothesized that the degree
of balance dysfunction on admission to rehabilitation would be
a
significant predictor of the
need for assistance at discharge, as measured by the
Functional
Independence Measure (FIM).
This study involved 237 cases of traumatic brain injury
patients
admitted to a rehabilitation
unit between November 1989 and September 1996. Using a
multiple
regression model, controlling
for age, initial Glasgow Coma Score (GCS), rehabilitation
admission strength, sitting
balance and standing balance, it was found that the degree of
impairment in sitting
balance at admission to rehabilitation was a significant
predictor of Discharge
FIM-Total (FIM-T) score (p
< 0.0001) and also of selected elements from the Discharge
FIM-Motor (FIM-M) score (p <
0.0005). The combination of age, initial admission GCS,
rehabilitation admission
strength, standing balance and sitting balance accounted for
29% of the
variance in the Discharge
Total FIM score. Among these, sitting balance was the second
most
powerful predictor of both
selected elements of the Discharge FIM motor score and
discharge
FIM-T. Sitting balance
predictive capacity was exceeded in power only by age.
Impairments in
sitting balance appear to
have a significant impact on functional outcome. Emphasis on
unique
rehabilitation techniques to
treat balance dysfunction in the adult TBI population is
warranted.
PMID:
10695570, UI: 2015811
Total head excursion and
resting head posture: normal and patient comparisons.
Hanten WP, Olson SL, Russell
JL, Lucio RM, Campbell AH
Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2000
Jan;81(1):62-6
School of Physical Therapy,
Texas Woman's University, Houston 77030, USA.
OBJECTIVE: To determine
whether significant differences existed between normal and
patient
groups on three postural
measurements: anterior-posterior total head excursion (THE),
resting
head posture in sitting
(RHPsit), and resting head posture in standing (RHPstd).
SUBJECTS:
Forty-two healthy subjects,
13 men and 29 women between the ages of 20 and 60 years, were
matched to 42 patients
according to gender and age. DESIGN: Measurements of THE,
RHPsit,
and RHPstd were taken for
each subject. Patients were measured during their initial
evaluation
and had neck pain as a
primary or secondary complaint. RESULTS: A two-way
multivariate
analysis of variance
followed by two-way analyses of variance showed that normal
subjects had
a significantly (p<.05)
greater THE than did the patients and that men (patients and
controls)
scored significantly higher
(p<.05) than women (patients and controls) on both THE and
RHPstd.
CONCLUSION: Clinical
assessment of patients with cervical pain should focus on
cervical
mobility rather than resting
head posture. Head/neck posture is different for males and
females
and they should not be
judged by the same standard.
The effect of a tilting seat
on back, lower back and legs during sitting work.
Udo H, Fujimura M, Yoshinaga F
Ind Health 1999
Oct;37(4):369-81
Department of Public Health, Hiroshima University
School of Medicine, Japan.
The purpose of this study was
to examine the possible effects of a tilting seat on the back,
lower
back and legs. Ten healthy
male subjects aged 22-28 performed word-processing operations
while sitting on a chair for
one hour under two different seating conditions: the rocking
condition
and the fixed condition. While
the subjects were performing the task, measurements of lower
leg
swelling were taken using
bioelectrical impedance plethysmography, and pain scores were
recorded every five min for
the neck, shoulders, back, lower back, hips and legs.
Electromyograms (EMGs) of the
back and lower back (at Th5-6, Th8-9, L1-2 and L3-4) were
recorded every sec. In
addition, the subjects were videotaped while using the rocking
seat, in
order to analyze the angle and
frequency of seat tilting. At the end of the experiment, the
subjects
were asked to evaluate the
two conditions with respect to localized fatigue and
operational
efficiency. There was no
significant difference in lower leg swelling between the two
conditions.
EMGs were significantly
different at Th5-6, Th8-9 and L1-2 between the two conditions.
The
rocking condition generated
greater EMGs at Th5-6 and L1-2, whereas the fixed condition
produced greater EMGs at
Th8-9. The pain scores for the neck, shoulders, back and lower
back were higher under the
fixed condition, while those for the buttocks were higher
under the
rocking condition. The average
tilting frequency was as low as 25.2 times per hour, with 15.6
times per hour for tilting
angles ranging from 1 to 2 degrees, and 9.6 times per hour for
tilting
angles exceeding 2 degrees. As
for the subjective evaluations of localized fatigue, seven of
the ten
subjects preferred the
rocking condition, while two preferred the fixed condition and
one subject
had no preference. Thus,
there was a significant difference in the subjective
evaluations of the two
chairs. These findings
suggest that the rocking condition, in contrast to the fixed
seating condition,
reduced back and lower back
pain as a result of its tilting capability. The results of
EMGs suggest
that the rocking condition
reduced back and lower back pain by increasing the overall
muscle
activity of the back and
lower back. The leg impedance measurements showed no effect of
the
rocking condition on the leg
swelling, as compared with the fixed condition.
Thoracic position effect on
shoulder range of motion, strength, and three-dimensional
scapular kinematics.
Kebaetse M, McClure P, Pratt
NA
Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1999
Aug;80(8):945-50
Department of Physical
Therapy, Allegheny University of the Health Sciences,
Philadelphia, PA,
USA.
OBJECTIVES: To determine the
effect of thoracic posture on scapular movement patterns,
active range of motion (ROM)
in scapular plane abduction, and isometric scapular plane
abduction muscle force. STUDY
DESIGN AND METHOD: Repeated measures design. There
were 34 healthy subjects (mean
age, 30.2 yrs). Each subject was positioned and stabilized
while
sitting in both erect and
slouched trunk postures. In each sitting posture a
three-dimensional
electromechanical digitizer
was used to measure thoracic flexion and scapular position and
orientation in three planes.
Measurements were taken with the arm (1) at the side, (2)
abducted
to horizontal in the
scapular plane, and (3) at maximum scapular plane abduction.
In each
posture, isometric abduction
muscle force was measured with the arm at the side and
abducted
to horizontal in the
scapular plane. RESULTS: In the slouched posture, the scapula
was
significantly more elevated
in the interval between 0 to 90 degrees abduction. In the
interval
between 90 degrees and
maximum abduction, the slouched posture resulted in
significantly less
scapular posterior tilting.
There was significantly less active shoulder abduction ROM in
the
slouched posture (mean
difference = 23.6 degrees +/- 10.7 degrees). Muscle force was
not
different between slouched and
erect postures with the arm at the side, but with the arm
horizontal muscle force was
decreased 16.2% in the slouched position. CONCLUSION:
Thoracic spine position
significantly affects scapular kinematics during scapular
plane abduction,
and the slouched posture is
associated with decreased muscle force.
Cervical root compression
monitoring by flexor carpi radialis H-reflex in healthy
subjects.
Sabbahi M, Abdulwahab S
Spine 1999 Jan
15;24(2):137-41
School
of Physical Therapy, Texas Woman's University, Houston, USA.
STUDY DESIGN: One-group,
pretest-postest experimental research with repeated measures.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the
effect of head postural modification on the flexor carpi
radialis
H-reflex in healthy subjects.
SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: H-reflex testing has
been reported to be useful in
evaluating and treating patients with lumbosacral and cervical
radiculopathy. The idea
behind this technique is that postural modification can cause
further
H-reflex inhibition,
indicating more compression of the impinged nerve root, or
recovery,
indicating decompression of
the root. Such assumptions cannot be supported unless the
influence
of normal head postural
modification on the H-reflex in healthy subjects is studied.
METHODS:
Twenty-two healthy subjects
participated in this study (14 men, 8 women; mean age, 39 +/-
9
years). The median nerve of
the subjects at the cubital fossa was electrically stimulated
(0.5
msec; 0.2 pulses per second
[pps] at H-max), whereas the flexor carpi radialis muscle
H-reflex
was recorded by
electromyography. The H-reflexes were recorded after the
subject randomly
maintained the end range of
head-forward flexion, backward extension, rotation to the
right and
the left, lateral bending to
the right and the left, retraction and protraction. These were
compared
with the H-reflex recorded
during comfortable neutral positions. Data were recorded after
the
subject maintained the
position for 30 seconds, to avoid the effect of dynamic
postural
modification on the H-reflex.
Four traces were recorded in each position. During recording,
the
H-reflex was monitored by
the M-response to avoid any changes in the
stimulation-recording
condition. RESULTS: Repeated
multivariate analysis of variance was used to evaluate the
significance of the difference
among the H-reflex, amplitude, and latency, in various head
positions. The H-reflex
amplitude showed statistically significant changes (P < 0.001)
with head
postural modification. All
head positions, except flexion, facilitated the H-reflex.
Extension, lateral
bending, and rotation toward
the side of the recording produced higher reflex facilitation
than the
other positions. These results
indicate that H-reflex changes may be caused by spinal root
compression-decompression
mechanisms. It may also indicate that relative spinal root
decompression occurs in most
head-neck postures except forward flexion. CONCLUSIONS:
Head postural modification
significantly influences the H-reflex amplitude but not the
latency. This
indicates that the H-reflex
is a more sensitive predictor of normal physiologic changes
than are
latencies. The H-reflex
modulation in various head positions may be-caused by relative
spinal
root
compression-decompression mechanisms.
Sitting balance I: trunk-arm
coordination and the contribution of the lower limbs during
self-paced reaching in sitting.
Dean C, Shepherd R, Adams R
Gait Posture 1999
Oct;10(2):135-46
School
of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Health Sciences, The University
of Sydney, PO Box 170,
Lidcombe, Australia.c.dean@cchs.usyd.edu.au
The effects of reach distance
and type of task on the functional relationship between the
trunk,
upper limb segments and the
lower limbs during self-paced reaching in sitting were
examined.
Two-dimensional kinematic,
kinetic and electromyography (EMG) data were collected as six
healthy subjects reached
forward under three distance (60, 100, 140% arm's length) and
two
task (reaching to press a
switch, reaching to grasp a glass) conditions. The results
demonstrate
that type of task affected
primarily the temporal aspects of coordination, with the grasp
task
taking consistently longer
than the press task. In contrast, reach distance affected both
the
spatio-temporal aspects of
coordination between the trunk and arm segments and the active
contribution of the lower
limbs. As reach distance increased, the magnitude of trunk and
upper-arm segmental motion
increased, whereas forearm segmental motion decreased.
However,
at each reach distance the
path of the hand was relatively straight and there was
remarkable
consistency in the
relationship between trunk and arm segments both within and
between subjects
suggesting that despite the
presence of redundant degrees of freedom, the individual uses
a
parsimonious coordinative
pattern. The vertical ground reaction force (GRF) and EMG data
demonstrated that the lower
limbs actively contributed to support the body mass when the
object
was located at 140% arm's
length.
Sitting balance II: reach
direction and thigh support affect the contribution of the
lower limbs when reaching beyond arm's length in sitting.
Dean CM, Shepherd RB, Adams
RD
Gait Posture 1999
Oct;10(2):147-53
School of Physiotherapy,
Faculty of Health Sciences, The University of Sydney, P.O. Box
170,
Lidcombe, Australia.c.dean@cchs.usyd.edu.au
The effects of reach direction
and extent of thigh support on the contribution of the lower
limbs
during seated reaching were
examined. Twelve healthy subjects aged 59-79 years performed
self-paced reaching forwards
and diagonally to both sides and under three thigh support
conditions. Vertical ground
reaction forces (GRF) and leg muscle activity were monitored
bilaterally. Reach direction
affected both the magnitude of peak vertical GRF and the
relative
distribution of vertical GRF
through the feet, demonstrating that the lower limbs work
cooperatively to control the
motion of the body mass. Extent of thigh support also affected
the
magnitude of peak vertical GRF
through the feet. In addition, the EMG data confirmed the
active
contribution of the lower
limbs when reaching beyond arm's length, with muscles in both
lower
limbs activated in all
trials.
PMID:
10502648, UI: 99434321
Neuroreport 1994 Apr
14;5(8):957-60
Is body balance more
perturbed by respiration in seating than in standing posture?
Bouisset S, Duchene JL
Laboratoire de Physiologie du Mouvement, URA-CNRS
631, Universite Paris-Sud, Orsay,
France.
The perturbing influence of
respiration on balance was studied in sitting and standing
subjects.
The pneumograms and
displacements of the centre of pressure of 10 normal subjects
were
recorded during quiet
breathing, deep breathing and apnoea. The usual stabilometric
parameters
were measured, and a power
spectrum density and time-locked averaging were used. The sway
path was longer in seated
subjects than in standing ones, suggesting that instantaneous
compensatory phenomena are
less efficient. The respiratory component of the sway path was
larger in seated (0.16) than
in standing subjects (0.09). It is concluded that respiration
is a
significant input for postural
control, and that sitting entails less instantaneous
steadiness. The
concept of respiratory synergy
is discussed.
Sitting balance in spinal
deformity.
Smith RM, Emans JB
Spine 1992 Sep;17(9):1103-9
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Childrens Hospital, Boston,
Massachusetts.
A computerized pressure plate
system was used to analyze the sitting pressure distribution
and
balance of 100 subjects with
both normal and abnormal spines. Normal subjects had a
balanced
sitting posture with the
weight taken evenly on each ischial tuberosity. Patients with
idiopathic
scoliosis showed significant
sitting imbalance especially in the presence of lumbar curves.
Bracing
improved the sitting balance
and stability in most patients. Abnormal sitting patterns were
seen
with the spinal deformities of
myelodysplasia or cerebral palsy. Some patients with severe
scoliosis had very asymmetric
patterns, which correlated with their loss of sitting
stability. The
kyphosis of myelodysplasia
produced an abnormal tripod sitting pattern due to pelvic
flexion and
a hyperlordosis of cerebral
palsy a pubic sitting pattern due to pelvic extension. The
patients
studied after spinal fusion
also had poor sitting balance and occasionally persisting
decubitus
ulceration.
PMID:
1411765, UI: 93031037
Lower-limb influence on
sitting balance while reaching forward.
Chari VR, Kirby RL
Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1986
Oct;67(10):730-3
To test the hypothesis that
the lower limbs contribute to sitting balance when a person
reaches
forward, we measured the
limits of forward reach in 20 healthy volunteers. While
sitting on the
buttocks alone (ischial
support) or with the thighs also supported and with both feet
on, one foot
off, or both feet off the
floor (in a balanced order), each subject reached as far
forward as
possible at table height at 0,
15, 30, and 45 degrees to the sagittal plane. With full thigh
support
the reaches at all angles
were greatest with both feet on the floor, and decreased
progressively
with one foot off (when
reaching toward the foot off the floor) and both feet off.
Thigh support
permitted significantly
greater reach than ischial support at all angles with both
feet off the ground,
but not in other settings.
These results have implications for seat design and when
considering
prostheses for patients
unlikely to walk.
[Influence of proprioceptive
input from leg, thigh, trunk and neck muscles on the
equilibrium of standing].
[Article in Japanese]
Sakuma A, Aihara Y
Nippon Jibiinkoka Gakkai
Kaiho 1999 May;102(5):643-9
Kamio
Memorial Hospital, Tokyo.
To investigate and compare the
roles of proprioceptive input from the leg, thigh, trunk and
neck
muscles on equilibrium, we
performed static posturography in 50 normal subjects in the
standing
position on a force platform
by applying vibratory stimulations to the muscles. The length
of the
displacement of the center of
gravity, maximum sway length and sway area were measured. The
amplitude of the body sway was
maximum when the stimulation was applied to the dorsal neck.
The forward shift of the
center of gravity was also marked by stimulation applied to
the dorsal
neck. The amplitude of the
body sway on stimulation of the leg muscles was also marked,
although less than that of
dorsal neck stimulation. The backward shift during stimulation
of the
gastrocnemius and the
forward shift during stimulation of the anterior tibialis were
remarkable.
The results indicate that the
leg muscles, which directly regulate the movement of the ankle
joint,
and the dorsal neck muscles,
which change the static equilibrium through the central
nervous
system, are important for
maintaining the standing posture.
PMID:
10388318, UI: 99314373
The role of the labyrinth,
proprioception and plantar mechanosensors in the maintenance
of an upright posture.
Yasuda T, Nakagawa T, Inoue
H, Iwamoto M, Inokuchi A
Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol
1999;256 Suppl 1:S27-32
Department of
Otorhinolaryngology, Faculty of Medicine Kyushu University,
Fukuoka, Japan.
The maintenance of an upright
posture in man requires information from vision, the
labyrinth,
proprioception and plantar
mechanosensors. In order to evaluate the role of the
labyrinth,
proprioception and plantar
mechanosensors, stabilometry was performed in subjects with
closed
eyes. Ten patients with
bilateral severe or complete labyrinthine paresis were
studied, as well as 9
patients with severe
proprioceptive disorders and 10 normal healthy persons whose
plantar
mechanosensors were
anesthetized by hypothermia. Both the area of sway and the
total locus
length (accumulated shift
distance length) were evaluated. On closing eyes, in patients
with
labyrinthine disorders
demonstrated that the area of sway increased more than length.
On the
other hand, in patients with
proprioceptive disorders, length increased more than the area.
In
plantar anesthetized subjects,
similar to the labyrinthine disorder cases, the area of sway
increased more than length.
These findings suggest that the labyrinth is a main monitor of
the area
of body sway, while
proprioception is a principle monitor of the velocity of body
movement of
sway (or locus length). The
plantar mechanosensor monitors the area of body sway similar
to the
labyrinth, but works less
than the labyrinth. The locus length is the distance per
minute and
reflects the velocity of body
sway. Thus, the length per area is a parameter for the
velocity of
body sway per area. Since
proprioceptive disorders increase both the locus length and
the length
per area, present findings
suggest that if proprioception is damaged, the body begins to
move
faster. Compensated
labyrinthine disorders have a tendency to increase the length
per area,
indicating that if a
labyrinthine disorder is compensated, the body adapts and
moves faster to
maintain an upright posture.
The reliability of postural
x-rays in measuring pelvic obliquity.
Fann AV, Lee R, Verbois GM
Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1999
Apr;80(4):458-61
Department of Physical
Medicine and Rehabilitation, John L. McClellan Veterans
Affairs Hospital and University of
Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, USA.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the
interrater and intrarater reliability of two methods of
measurement of
postural radiographs for
determining the amount of pelvic obliquity. DESIGN: Four
blinded raters
evaluated the amount of pelvic
obliquity using two measurement methods. SETTING: Physical
medicine and rehabilitation
outpatient clinic in a VA hospital. PARTICIPANTS: Fifty-two
randomly chosen radiographs
from 36 patients referred to a clinic to evaluate and treat
pelvic
obliquity. MEASURES: Amount of
pelvic obliquity was determined by line of eburnation and by
the intersulcate line.
Pearson's correlation coefficients and percent agreements were
calculated for
each set of measurements.
RESULTS: Pearson's correlation coefficients and percent
agreements
were higher for both
interrater and intrarater measurements for the intersulcate
line.
CONCLUSION: Intersulcate line
is the more reliable method for determining the amount of
pelvic obliquity and will be
used in future studies to assess the effectiveness of
correcting pelvic
obliquity to improve chronic
back pain.
Acute systematic and
variable postural adaptations induced by an orthopaedic shoe
lift in control subjects.
Beaudoin L, Zabjek KF, Leroux
MA, Coillard C, Rivard CH
Eur Spine J 1999;8(1):40-5
Departement de chirurgie, Faculte de Medicine, Montreal,
Quebec, Canada.
A small leg length
inequality, either true or functional, can be implicated in
the pathogenesis of
numerous spinal disorders. The
correction of a leg length inequality with the goal of
treating a
spinal pathology is often
achieved with the use of a shoe lift. Little research has
focused on the
impact of this correction on
the three-dimensional (3D) postural organisation. The goal of
this
study is to quantify in
control subjects the 3D postural changes to the pelvis, trunk,
scapular belt
and head, induced by a shoe
lift. The postural geometry of 20 female subjects (X = 22,
sigma =
1.2) was evaluated using a
motion analysis system for three randomised conditions:
control, and
right and left shoe lift.
Acute postural adaptations were noted for all subjects,
principally
manifested through the tilt
of the pelvis, asymmetric version of the left and right iliac
bones, and a
lateral shift of the pelvis
and scapular belt. The difference in the version of the right
and left iliac
bones was positively
associated with the pelvic tilt. Postural adaptations were
noted to vary
between subjects for
rotation and postero-anterior shift of the pelvis and scapular
belt. No
notable differences between
conditions were noted in the estimation of kyphosis and
lordosis.
The observed systematic and
variable postural adaptations noted in the presence of a shoe
lift
reflects the unique
constraints of the musculoskeletal system. This suggests that
the global impact
of a shoe lift on a
patient's posture should also be considered during treatment.
This study
provides a basis for
comparison of future research involving pathological
populations.
PMID:
10190853, UI: 99205128
Control of upright standing
posture during low-frequency linear oscillation.
Kawakami O, Sudoh H, Koike Y,
Mori S, Sobue G, Watanabe S
Neurosci Res 1998
Apr;30(4):333-42
Department of Neurology, Nagoya University School of Medicine,
Japan.
We examined the effects of
anteroposterior movement of a sled on human upright standing.
Each
of six healthy men stood on
the platform of a sled in the dark. The sinusoidal
acceleration was
provided, from 0.02 to 0.04
G, followed by 0.06 and 0.08 G, at a stroke length from 6 to
10 m
and then to 14 m. Low
acceleration (0.02 and 0.04 G) induced body sway, pivoting on
the ankle
joint. High acceleration
(0.06 and 0.08 G) increased body sway, but the head-neck joint
remained locked upright. The
electromyographic recordings of the lower leg muscles revealed
continuous tonic EMG
activities of the gastrocnemius and tibialis anterior muscles
at acceleration
of 0.02 and 0.04 G, while
reciprocal activation was observed at 0.06 and 0.08 G. During
head
movement, the neck muscles
were slightly activated tonically at acceleration of 0.02 and
0.04 G,
but they were markedly and
tonically activated at 0.06 and 0.08 G. We speculate that the
sled
oscillation caused body sway
in proportion to the acceleration, with the ankle joint
playing a
principal role. Analysis of
neck movement also revealed that the head was held in a fixed
upright
position, indicating that the
vestibulocollic reflex might tonically activate the neck
muscles.
PMID:
9678637, UI: 98341777
Postural aberrations in low
back pain.
Christie HJ, Kumar S, Warren
SA
Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1995
Mar;76(3):218-24
Department of Rehabilitation Services, St. Boniface General
Hospital, Winnipeg, Canada.
The purpose of this study was
to measure and describe postural aberrations in chronic and
acute
low back pain in search of
predictors of low back pain. The sample included 59 subjects
recruited to the following
three groups: chronic, acute, or no low back pain. Diagnoses
included
disc disease, mechanical
back pain, and osteoarthritis. Lumbar lordosis, thoracic
kyphosis, head
position, shoulder position,
shoulder height, pelvic tilt, and leg length were measured
using a
photographic technique. In
standing, chronic pain patients exhibited an increased lumbar
lordosis
compared with controls (p <
.05). Acute patients had an increased thoracic kyphosis and a
forward head position
compared with controls (p < .05). In sitting, acute patients
had an
increased thoracic kyphosis
compared with controls (p < .05). These postural parameters
identified discrete postural
profiles but had moderate value as predictors of low back
pain.
Therefore other unidentified
factors are also important in the prediction of low back pain.
PMID:
7717811, UI: 95233866
Neurosci Res 1992
Apr;13(3):227-33
Comparison of amplitude of
human soleus H-reflex during sitting and standing.
Hayashi
R, Tako K, Tokuda T, Yanagisawa N
Department of Medicine (Neurology), Shinshu University School
of Medicine, Matsumoto,
Japan.
The modulation of the H-reflex
in the human soleus muscle under conditions of different
length or
of background EMG activity was
compared in 7 healthy subjects under three conditions:
sitting,
standing with support, and
standing without support. The amplitude of the H-reflex
increased
when the muscle was shortened
in both the sitting and standing conditions. The degree of
increase
in H-reflex was smaller during
standing than sitting for the same change in muscle length.
The
H-reflex was augmented
according to the increase of the background EMG. The "reflex
gain",
the ratio of the increase in
amplitude of the H-reflex to soleus muscle EMG activity,
decreased on
sitting, standing with support
and standing without support, ranked in that order. From these
observations, it is
concluded that the H-reflex is modulated by both muscle length
and the degree
of postural stability. The
modulation of the reflex could be interpreted in terms of gain
compensation and would serve
to stabilize posture. A decrease in reflex gain may be
appropriate
in stabilizing the spinal
reflex feedback loop during standing, especially without
support.
PMID:
1341194, UI: 92301703
Br J Sports Med 1991
Mar;25(1):10-3
Biomechanical implications of
mild leg length inequality.
McCaw ST, Bates BT
Department of Health, Physical Education, Recreation and
Dance, Illinois State University,
Normal
61761.
The effect of mild leg
length inequality (lower extremity length difference less than
3 cm) on
posture and gait has been
the source of much controversy. Many opinions have been
expressed
both for and against the
need for intervention to reduce the magnitude of the
discrepancy. This
paper emphasizes the need
for accurate and reliable assessment of leg length differences
using a
clinically functional
radiographic technique, and reviews the biomechanical
implications of leg
length inequality as
related to the development of stress fractures, low back pain
and
osteoarthritis.
PMID:
1913023, UI: 92004554
Lumbar curvature in standing
and sitting in two types of chairs: relationship of hamstring
and hip flexor muscle length.
Link CS, Nicholson GG,
Shaddeau SA, Birch R, Gossman MR
Phys Ther 1990
Oct;70(10):611-8
Physical Therapy Department, Institute of Rehabilitation and
Research, Houston, TX 77030.
A purpose of this study was
to determine the difference in the lumbar curves of subjects
while
they stood compared with while
they sat in two chairs with different seat angles--the Balans
Multi-Chair (BMC) and a
standard conventional chair (SCC). An additional purpose was
to
determine the relationship
between lumbar curvature and 1) anthropometric factors and
hamstring
and hip flexor muscle length
during standing and during sitting in the two chairs and 2)
amount of
time spent sitting.
Sixty-one men between 20 and 30 years of age served as
subjects. Lumbar
curve measurements were taken
with a flexible ruler with the subjects first standing and
then
sitting in the two chairs.
Hamstring and hip flexor muscle lengths were indicated by
range-of-motion measurements
taken with a gravity goniometer. Age, number of hours spent
sitting per day, upper body
length, and right leg length also were recorded. Subjects had
significantly more lumbar
extension when they sat in the BMC than when they sat in the
SCC.
Hip flexor length was the only
factor that appeared to relate significantly to the difference
between the standing lumbar
curve and the lumbar curves in the BMC and the SCC.
PMID:
2217540, UI: 9101799
2Orthopade 1990
Sep;19(5):273-7
[Pelvic tilt and leg length
correction].
[Article in German]
Wagner
H
Orthopadische Klinik Wichernhaus Rummelsberg,
Schwarzenbruck/Nurnberg.
Pelvic tilt is often the
consequence of a discrepancy in leg length and can be
corrected either with
orthotic devices or by
operative equalization of the leg length. However, pelvic tilt
can also occur
independently of the leg
length in cases of asymmetry of the pelvis, malposition of the
hip joint or
contracted scoliotic deviation
of the spine. In such cases with complex deformities
correction of
the pelvic tilt should aim a
balanced body posture rather than necessarily a symmetric
level of the
iliac crests
. Brain 1990 Feb;113 ( Pt
1):65-84
Responses of leg muscles in
humans displaced while standing. Effects of types of
perturbation and of postural set.
Nardone
A, Giordano A, Corra T, Schieppati M
Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation, University
of Milan, Italy.
Toe-up or toe-down tilts of a
platform on which a subject stands induce early EMG responses
in
the leg muscles initially
stretched by the perturbation and late responses in the
antagonist muscles.
Early responses are thought to
be connected with the stretch of the leg muscle in which they
appear. Disagreement exists
as to the origin of the late responses occurring in the
antagonist
muscle. The aims of this study
were to assess (1) whether the late responses are induced by
afferent volleys from the
spindles of the muscle stretched by the initial perturbation,
or (2)
whether they are connected
with the induced overall postural imbalance, and (3) whether
the
postural set may influence
the occurrence of the late responses. Subjects standing on a
platform
underwent randomized
perturbations stretching the soleus (Sol) muscle (upward tilts
and
backward translations) and
tibialis anterior (TA) muscles (downward tilts and forward
translations). The platform
movement was regulated in order to yield changes in ankle
angle of
similar extent and velocity
during both tilt and translation. Surface EMGs of Sol and TA
were
recorded bilaterally. An
optoelectronic device detected the movements of markers fixed
on the
body. From these data,
movements of the head, and changes in hip, knee and ankle
angles, along
with variations in the
length of Sol, gastrocnemii (Gas) and TA were computed. Both
tilts and
translations, equally
stretching Sol or TA, induced similar early responses in the
stretched muscle.
Consistent late responses in
the antagonist muscle (antagonist reactions, ARs) were induced
only
by tilts. In spite of
similar changes in ankle angles, the most striking differences
in body
movements between tilts and
translations stretching the same leg muscle concerned changes
in
knee angles and Gas length.
Slight differences were also seen in vertical head movements.
Standing and holding onto a
frame strongly decreased the amplitude and the frequency of
occurrence of both early
responses and ARs only in the TA muscle, while all Sol
responses were
not affected. This
modulation of TA responses occurred in spite of changes in
ankle angle and
head movements similar to
those occurring under the free-standing condition. It was
concluded
that early EMG responses are
connected with the stretch of the muscle induced by the
platform
movement. The ARs, on the
other hand, appear to be related to the type of overall
postural
imbalance. The absence of
ARs during translations suggests a role in these responses of
the
afferences from the joint and
muscles of the lower limb.
PMID:
2302538, UI: 90149622
Incidence of sacroiliac joint
malalignment in leg length discrepancies.
Schuit
D, McPoil TG, Mulesa P
J Am Podiatr Med Assoc 1989
Aug;79(8):380-3
The purpose of this study was
to ascertain the incidence of leg length discrepancies in a
sample of
asymptomatic female college
students, and then to determine the incidence of sacroiliac
joint
malalignment within that same
sample. Structural leg length, functional leg length, and
sacroiliac
position were determined for
each subject. The results indicate a high incidence of leg
length
discrepancies within the
sample, and also a fairly high incidence of asymptomatic
sacroiliac joint
malalignment when leg length
discrepancies are present
Leg-length inequality has
poor correlation with lumbar scoliosis. A radiological study
of 100 patients with chronic low-back pain.
Hoikka V, Ylikoski M,
Tallroth K .
Arch Orthop Trauma Surg
1989;108(3):173-5
Department of Clinical
Orthopedics, Orthopedic Hospital of the Invalid Foundation,
Helsinki,
Finland.
Leg-length inequality and
its hypothetical consequences, pelvic tilt and lumbar
scoliosis, were
measured in 100 young or
middle-aged adults suffering from chronic low-back pain.
Leg-length
inequality had a good
correlation with the pelvic tilt assessed from the iliac
crests, a moderate
correlation with the sacral
tilt, but a poor correlation with the lumbar scoliosis. The
sacral tilt
correlated well with the
lumbar scoliosis when the tilt was more than 3 degrees but
poorly when it
was smaller. Thus, there is a
gradually decreasing correlation between the posture
parameters
when moving from the hips up
to the lumbar spine. We conclude that before a radiologically
observed leg-length inequality
be considered as the cause of low-back pain, an erect-posture
radiograph of the whole pelvis
and lumbar spine is essential, in order to assess an existing
pelvic
tilt and scoliosis.
Neck, trunk and limb muscle
responses during postural perturbations in humans.
Keshner EA, Woollacott MH,
Debu B
Exp Brain Res
1988;71(3):455-66
Institute of Neurosciences, College of Human Development and
Performance, University of
Oregon,
Eugene 97403.
This study examined the EMG
onsets of leg, trunk, and neck muscles in 10 standing human
subjects in response to
support surface anterior and posterior translations, and to
plantar and
dorsiflexion rotations. The
objective of the study was to test the hypothesis that the
responses
radiating upward from distal
leg muscles represent part of a large ascending synergy
encompassing axial muscles
along the entire length of the body. If these responses are
not
ascending, then the muscles of
the neck, and possibly the trunk, can be independently
activated
by vestibular, proprioceptive
or visual inputs. We analysed the timing of postural muscle
responses within and between
body segments in order to determine whether they maintained a
consistent temporal
relationship under translational and rotational platform
movement paradigms.
Our results did not strongly
support an ascending pattern of activation in all directions
of platform
perturbation. Temporal
differences between activation patterns to platform
perturbations in the
forward or backward
directions were revealed. In response to posterior platform
translations we
observed an ascending pattern
of muscle responses along the extensor surface of the body. In
addition, responses elicited
in the neck flexor and abdominal muscles occurred as early as
those
of the stretched ankle
muscles. This pattern of upward radiation from stretched ankle
muscles
was not as clear for
anterior platform displacements, where early neck flexor
muscle responses
were observed during the
ascending sequence on the flexor surface of the body. Platform
rotations caused fewer
responses in the neck and upper trunk muscles than
translations, and all
muscles responses occurred
simultaneously rather than sequentially. Probable differences
in the
stimulation of vestibular and
neck proprioceptive inputs and the mechanical demands of the
rotation and translation
paradigms are discussed.
PMID:
3416963, UI: 88329317
Simulated leg-length
discrepancy: its effect on mean center-of-pressure position
and postural sway.
Mahar RK, Kirby RL, MacLeod DA
Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1985
Dec;66(12):822-4
We hypothesized that
leg-length discrepancies of as little as 1cm would induce a
significant
postural shift and increase
the extent of postural sway. We had 14 normal volunteers stand
on a
force platform with their feet
in a standard position. Center-of-pressure data were recorded
at
100Hz for 20 seconds while the
subjects stood barefoot with no lifts or (in random order)
with
lifts of 1, 2, 3, and 4cm
under their left and right feet. From these data we derived
the mean
center-of-pressure position
and the extent of postural sway. Lifts of as little as 1cm
shifted the
mean center-of-pressure toward
the longer leg to a statistically significant extent (p less
than
0.001), the mean difference
compared with the barefoot condition being 6.1% of the
distance
between the feet; increasing
the discrepancy did not proportionately increase the effect.
The
postural sway (total travel of
the center-of-pressure) in a mediolateral direction increased
significantly with a 1cm
discrepancy (p less than 0.01), and continued to increase in
proportion to
the magnitude of the
discrepancy. There were no effects on anteroposterior position
or sway and
no influence of left-right
dominance. These results support our hypothesis that a
leg-length
discrepancy of as little as
1cm may be biomechanically important
The effect of postural
scoliosis on lumbar apophyseal joints.
Giles LG, Taylor JR
. Scand J Rheumatol
1984;13(3):209-20
The effects of leg length
inequality with postural scoliosis on the lumbar apophyseal
joints was
investigated by comparing
paired left and right joints, using histological sections from
cadavers
having a leg length
inequality of 1 cm or more, and cadavers having no leg length
inequality. A
statistical analysis of
mid-joint geometry (articular cartilage and subchondral bone
thickness) is
made from mid-joint
histological sections. The study clearly demonstrates that leg
length
inequality of 1 cm or more
is associated with asymmetrical changes in joint cartilage and
subchondral bone in the
apical and lumbosacral apophyseal joints of the spine in
postural
scoliosis.
Surgery for syringomyelia: an
analysis based on 163 surgical cases.
Goel A, Desai K
Acta Neurochir (Wien)
2000;142(3):293-301; discussion 301-2
OBJECT: The authors analyzed
the cases of 163 patients with syringomyelia to assess the
appropriate surgical
procedure. METHODS: Depending on the aetiological factors and
treatment
considerations the series was
classified into three groups. Group I were cases where there
was
no definite demonstrable
aetiological factor; Group II cases had basilar invagination
and/or Chiari
malformation; and >>>>>Group
III consisted of cases where the syrinx was secondary to an
obvious
aetiology, such as a mass
lesion either in the posterior cranial fossa or in the spine
or >>>>a severe
kyphotic spinal deformity.
Post-traumatic syringomyelia and syrinx in association with
spina bifida
were not studied. CONCLUSIONS:
We concluded that for Group I cases syringosubarachnoid
shunting is the ideal form of
treatment. In Group II cases foramen magnum bony decompression
is satisfactory and
physiological. Good results were obtained even in cases where
either a
foramen magnum decompression
alone or in combination with a syringo-subarachnoid shunt was
done. Only
syringosubarachnoid shunt (without a foramen magnum
decompression) in Group II
cases was found to produce
poor outcome. Group III cases should be treated for the
primary
aetiological problem. Only
syrinx drainage procedure without treatment of aetiology in
these
cases produced poor results.
It was observed that clinical outcome rather than radiological
improvement is the reliable
indicator of the surgical result.
The treatment dilemma in
post-traumatic syringomyelia.
Ronen J, Catz A, Spasser R,
Gepstein R
Disabil Rehabil 1999
Sep;21(9):455-7
PURPOSE: The aim of the
present study was to compare the functional effect of
conservative
and surgical treatment in
post-traumatic syringomyelia. METHOD: The files of 10 male
patients
treated for posttraumatic
syringomyelia were retrospectively reviewed from 1986 to 1996.
RESULTS: The spinal lesion was
complete in five patients and incomplete in five. All patients
underwent rehabilitation, five
of them following surgery. The operative procedures included
drainage by
syringosubarachnoid shunting (four patients) and decompressive
laminectomy (one
patient).>>>>>>>
Rehabilitation alone improved the functional status in all
five patients so treated. After
surgery, function deteriorated
in four of the five operated patients, and rehabilitation
failed to
restore the preoperative
functional status in any of them.>>>> CONCLUSION: In view of
the results
it is suggested that patients
with post-traumatic syringomyelia undergo rehabilitation with
very
close clinical and magnetic
resonance imaging follow-up.
[Posttraumatic syringomyelia].
Freund M, Aschoff A, Spahn B,
Sartor K
Rofo Fortschr Geb Rontgenstr
Neuen Bildgeb Verfahr 1999 Dec;171(6):417-23
The improvement of preclinical
emergency medicine, better surgical and conservative
therapies,
and the development of
intensive care units and specialized centers have improved the
survival
rate for patients with serious
spinal cord injuries. Therefore, more sequelae of chronic
spinal cord
injuries such as
post-traumatic spinal cord cavitations also occur. The first
such case was
described by Bastian in 1867.
Generally, these cavitations were diagnosed from 2 months up
to
32 years after the trauma. The
overall prevalence of post-traumatic syringomyelia (PTS) is
not
known; however, with the
increasing use of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), its
diagnosis has
increased, ranging from 2.3%
of paraplegic and tetraplegic patients in 1976 and 3.2% in
1985, to
nearly 50% in a selected group
of patients in 1991 and 1993. In 1995, a 4.45% incidence was
reported. In our clinic we
are currently treating 440 cases of syringomyelia, 140 of
which are
PTS. Several observations
suggest more than one potential mechanism for the evolution of
a
post-traumatic cyst or PTS.
Various factors, such as hemorrhage or, in particular,
ischemia within
the spinal cord, blockage of
the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pathways >>>>>> around the cord
or localized
meningeal fibrosis either
alone or in combination with other factors, may be involved.
Clinically,
sensory disturbances, loss of
motor function, pain, and modification of the deep tendon
reflexes
are observed in most patients.
On MRI, PTS is seen as a longitudinal, cystic cavity within
the
spinal cord, giving a
hypointense signal on T1-weighted images and a hyperintense
signal on
T2-weighted images. For
treatment planning it is mandatory to identify the lower and
upper end
of the PTS on the MRI.
Posttraumatic cervical
syringomyelia. Incidence, clinical presentation,
electrophysiological studies, syrinx protein and results of
conservative and operative treatment.
Rossier AB, Foo D, Shillito J,
Dyro FM
Brain 1985 Jun;108 ( Pt
2):439-61
In eleven years, 30 (3.2%) of
951 patients with spinal cord injury developed cervical
syringomyelia. This condition
was found in 22 (4.5%) of 488 posttraumatic tetraplegic and 8
(1.7%) of 463 posttraumatic
paraplegic patients; the incidence was about 8 per cent in
patients
with complete tetraplegia.
This study demonstrated the rarer clinical manifestations of
syringomyelia, namely
autonomic dysfunction, alterations in the sensory level with
postural
changes, the early occurrence
of tendon areflexia and painless motor deterioration.
Prolonged F
wave latencies were present
in all patients with a demonstrable syrinx and a higher
protein
content was found in the
syrinx than in the cisternal fluid. >>>>>>Some of the symptoms
and signs in a
proportion of the patients
treated conservatively remained stable without operative
treatment over
a number of years. Most of the
patients in whom operation was performed for progressive motor
weakness or severe pain had
good postoperative results although a few developed late
sensory
or motor changes. There was no
benefit in operating on a patient with a small syrinx.
The Biomechanical Effect of
Postoperative Hypolordosis in Instrumented Lumbar Fusion on
Instrumented and Adjacent Spinal Segments.
Umehara S, Zindrick MR,
Patwardhan AG, Havey RM, Vrbos LA, Knight GW, Miyano
S, Kirincic M, Kaneda K, Lorenz MA
Spine 2000 Jul
1;25(13):1617-1624
STUDY DESIGN: Change in lumbar
lordosis was measured in patients that had
undergone posterolateral lumbar fusions
using transpedicular instrumentation. The biomechanical
effects of postoperative lumbar
malalignment were measured in cadaveric specimens. OBJECTIVES:
To determine the extent of
postoperative lumbar sagittal malalignment caused by an
intraoperative kneeling position with
90 degrees of hip and knee flexion, and to assess its effect
on the mechanical loading of the
instrumented and adjacent segments. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND
DATA: The importance of maintaining the
baseline lumbar lordosis after surgery has been stressed in
the literature. However, there are few
objective data to evaluate whether postoperative hypolordosis
In the instrumented segments can
increase the likelihood of junctional breakdown.
METHODS: Segmental lordosis was
measured on preoperative standing, intraoperative prone, and
postoperative standing radiographs. In
human cadaveric spines, a lordosis loss of up to 8 degrees was
created across L4-S1 using calibrated
transpedicular devices. Specimens were tested in extension
and under axial loading in the upright
posture. RESULTS: In patients who underwent L4-S1 fusions,
the lordosis within the fusion
decreased by 10 degrees intraoperatively and after surgery.
Postoperative lordosis in the proximal
(L2-L3 and L3-L4) segments increased by 2 degrees each, as
compared with the preoperative
measures. Hypolordosis in the instrumented segments increased
the load across the posterior
transpedicular devices, the posterior shear force, and the
lamina strain at the adjacent level.
CONCLUSIONS: Hypolordosis in the instrumented segments caused
increased loading of the posterior
column of the adjacent segments. These biomechanical effects
may explain the degenerative changes at
the junctional level that have been observed as
long-term consequences of lumbar
fusion.
[Results of lumbar and
lumbosacral fusion: clinical and radiological correlations in
113 cases reviewed at 3.8 years].
Steib JP, Bogorin I, Brax M,
Lang G
Rev Chir Orthop Reparatrice
Appar Mot 2000 Apr;86(2):127-35
PURPOSE OF THE STUDY: Spinal
fusion requires the use of hardware for reduction
and stabilization. We present the
clinical and radiological behavior of a population of patients
with lumbar and lumbosacral spinal
fusion. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between 1990 and
1992, 113 patients were operated for
lumbar and lumbosacral fusion. Mean age of the population was
43 years and mean follow-up was 3.8
years. Most of the fusions were L4-S1 fusions. 56% of
the patients had a previous surgery.
Thirteen patients in the series were reoperated and
analyzed separately. In the majority of
the cases, the indication for surgery was back pain with or
without leg pain. Diagnoses were:
spondylolisthesis, discopathy, scoliosis, and pseudoarthrosis.
The spine was fused and reduced using
two lordotic rods. Peroperative and postoperative lordosis
were calculated on X-rays. Clinical
results were analyzed with the Beaujon-Lassale score. RESULTS:
Mean improvement was significantly
better for spondylolisthesis than for other pathologies (85.6%
versus 77.1%). Returning to work was
possible for 85.5% of those with improvement and was not
possible for 69.8%. The gain achieved
in lordosis at surgery was lost at last follow-up. The
lordosis of the construct appeared to
protect against the development of discopathies above and
below the construct. Discopathis led to
a poor score. The rate of non-union was 7.9%, the rate of
repeated surgery 6.1% and the rate of
hardware removal 23.8%. At last follow-up, improvement
was achieved in 45.6% of the 13
patients of the series who had repeat surgery. DISCUSSION:
The results in our series are similar
to those reported by others. Lumbar lordosis is an important
factor: if lost, more interbody fusions
may be subsequently required. Diagnosis of non-union is
difficult and reoperation is the only
sure manner to prove it by applying distraction-compression
manoeuvres on the screws. All
non-unions presented were symptomatic; incidence in the series
was thus probably higher. Non-union and
reoperation with a longer fusion are perhaps correlated with
insufficient elasticity in the
osteosynthesis. Optimal rod elasticity is a factor which
remains to be defined. CONCLUSION:
Clinical results of lumbar and lumbosacral fusions are not
unsatisfactory, but in our series
almost one patient out of three had to be reoperated. One of
the reasons for so many reoperations is
certainly hardware rigidity. Hardware was not removed without
testing the fusion as this is the only
means of sure diagnosis of non-union. Reoperation should not
be considered a failure in this
difficult surgery of back pain which requires long-term
surgical follow-up.
Sagittal alignment in
lumbosacral fusion: relations between radiological parameters
and pain.
Lazennec JY, Ramare S, Arafati
N, Laudet CG, Gorin M, Roger B, Hansen S, Saillant G,
Eur Spine J 2000
Feb;9(1):47-55
Service de Chirurgie
Orthopedique et Traumatologique, Hopital Pitie-Salpetriere 83,
Paris, France.
The objective of this study
was to conduct a radiological analysis of posture before and
after lumbosacral fusion to evaluate
the influence of spinal alignment on the occurrence and
pattern of post surgical pain. The
study included 81 patients, of whom 51 had a history of
previous low back surgery. We excluded
patients with suspected or confirmed nonunion. In the fusion
group, the 27 patients who were pain
free after the procedure were compared to the 54 patients with
residual pain. Thirty patients had pain
only or primarily when they were standing immobile, 18 when
they were sitting immobile, and six in
both positions. Measurements were done on full-length
lateral radiographs of the spine, with
the patient standing according to Duval Beaupere criteria.
The subgroup with postfusion pain was
characterized at baseline by a more vertical sacrum with
less sacral tilt (ST) (P < 0.0062) and
more pelvic tilt (PT) (P < 0.0160). PT at last follow-up (PT
fu) correlated with the presence of
postfusion pain (NP: P = 0.0003). In the patients with
postfusion pain, PT was almost twice
the normal value. ST at last follow-up (ST fu) in the standing
position was also correlated with the
presence of postfusion pain (P < 0.0001) indicating that the
sacrum remained abnormally vertical in
the subjects with postfusion pain. Using logistic regression,
the only prognostic factor for residual
pain at last follow-up was ST fu. Both at pre-operative
evaluation and at last follow-up,
patients with pain in the standing position or in both the
standing and sitting positions were
characterized at pre-operative status by a more vertical
sacrum with less sacral tilt. The
results of this study indicate that, achieving a strong fusion
should not be the only goal.
Appropriate position of the fused vertebrae is also of
paramount importance to minimize muscle
work during posture maintenance. The main risk is failing to
correct or to causing excessive pelvic
retroversion with a vertical sacrum leading to a sagittal
alignment that replicates the sitting
position This situation is often
accompanied by loss of lumbar lordosis and adversely affects
stiff or degenerative hips.
Maintaining lumbar lordosis
with anterior single solid-rod instrumentation in
thoracolumbar and lumbar adolescent idiopathic scoliosis.
Sweet FA, Lenke LG, Bridwell
KH, Blanke KM
Spine 1999 Aug
15;24(16):1655-62
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, St.
Louis, Missouri, USA.
STUDY DESIGN: A prospective
radiographic evaluation of 20 consecutive patients with
primary lumbar or thoracolumbar
adolescent idiopathic scoliosis who were treated with anterior
convex compressive single solid-rod
spinal instrumentation and structural titanium mesh (Harms)
cages. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate a
lordosis-preserving anterior single solid-rod instrumented
fusion technique for these specific
adolescent idiopathic curves. SUMMARY OF
BACKGROUND DATA: Maintaining
instrumented segmental lumbar lordosis after anterior fusion
and instrumentation for thoracolumbar
and lumbar curves has been difficult. Twenty
consecutive patients who underwent
anterior single solid-rod fusion, aged 18 or younger with a
primary thoracolumbar or lumbar curve,
were observed for preservation of lordosis for a minimum of
2 years. METHODS: All patients
underwent an identical anterior surgical technique,
involving discectomies and anulectomies
of all convex discs, structural titanium mesh (Harms) cages
placed in the anterior half of all disc
spaces below T12, morselized rib autograft packed in all disc
spaces to be fused and inside the
cages, and anterior single solid-rod (5.0-mm or 5.5-mm
diameter) convex compressive spinal
instrumentation with appropriate lordotic rod contour and rod
rotation as necessary. The anterior rod
was placed just posterior to the cages to optimize lordotic
contouring of the spine during
compression. None of the patients was braced after surgery.
The lowest instrumented vertebrae (LIV)
were L2 (n = 3), L3 (n = 15), and L4 (n = 2), typically the
lower end vertebra of the Cobb
measurement. RESULTS: Measurements for the primary coronal
Cobb before surgery, 1 week after
surgery, and 2 years after surgery were 48 degrees, 11
degrees, and 12 degrees; for C7 plumb
line deviation from the midline: 3.6 cm, 1.9 cm, and 1.2 cm;
for lowest instrumented vertebra
translation: 31 mm, 15 mm, and 15 mm; and for LIV tilt: 29
degrees, 6 degrees and 6 degrees,
respectively. Sagittal measurements before surgery, 1 week
after surgery, and 2 years after
surgery were: T12-L2: -1 degree, -6 degrees, and -6 degrees;
T12-LIV: -8 degrees, -13 degrees, -9
degrees; T12-S1: -61 degrees, -56 degrees, -60 degrees; and
entire instrumented levels: -6 degrees,
-9 degrees, and -6 degrees, respectively. Coronal plane
correction improved: 75% in the primary
Cobb, 66% in the plumb line, 50% in LIV translation, and 80%
in LIV tilt. Sagittal plane alignment
improved in T12-L2 lordosis (P < 0.01) with preservation of
physiologic lordosis in the
instrumented levels, T12-LIV, and T12-sacrum. There were no
nstrumentation failures,
pseudarthroses, or reoperations. CONCLUSIONS: Coronal plane
correction with preservation of
thoracolumbar and lumbar lordosis 2 years after anterior
convex compressive spinal
instrumentation was accomplished using a lordotically
contoured single solid rod with
structural cages placed anteriorly in
the disc spaces of patients with primary thoracolumbar or
lumbar adolescent idiopathic scoliosis
Axial symptoms and cervical
alignments after cervical anterior spinal fusion for patients
with cervical myelopathy.
Kawakami M, Tamaki T, Yoshida
M, Hayashi N, Ando M, Yamada H
. J Spinal Disord 1999
Feb;12(1):50-6
Department of Orthopedic
Surgery, Wakayama Medical College, Wakayama City, Japan.
This retrospective clinical
study was designed to examine the relation between cervical
alignment and axial symptoms developing
after cervical anterior spinal fusion. Sixty patients with
myelopathy treated with cervical
anterior spinal fusion were reviewed. For radiographic
evaluation, lordosis, enlargement of
the fused segments and neural foramen, radiographic union, and
degeneration of adjacent segment were
reviewed before or after surgery or both. Twenty-three
patients had axial symptoms. Only local
kyphosis and narrowing of the neural foramen at the fused
segment were recognized more often in
patients with axial symptoms than in those without such
symptoms. No less than 2 mm and < or =
5 mm in enlargement of the anterior disc space immediately
after surgery resulted in maintenance
of cervical lordosis. These findings suggest that > or = 2 mm
and < or = 5 mm in enlargement of
anterior vertebral body height during operation results in
prevention of axial symptoms.
@@@@1: Spine 1995 Jun
1;20(11):1245-50; discussion 1251
Trial into the effects of
repeated neck retractions in normal subjects.
Pearson ND, Walmsley RP
School of Rehabilitation
Therapy, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
STUDY DESIGN. This
investigation measured the immediate effects of 10, 20, and
30 repeated neck retraction
movements on the retraction range of motion and
resting neck posture in
asymptomatic subjects. OBJECTIVES. The results provide
baseline gross kinematic data
concerning the effects of neck retraction
movements. Future work
involving patients is anticipated and proposed. SUMMARY
OF BACKGROUND INFORMATION.
Neck retraction movements are an assessment maneuver
and a treatment technique
advocated by Robin McKenzie for patients with neck
pain. They are a commonly
prescribed physical therapy technique used to treat
patients with neck pain and
dysfunction. No previous studies of this maneuver
have been reported. METHODS.
Two groups of 15 subjects, one group 20-29 years
old and the other 50-59 years
old, participated. Each group performed three sets
of 10 repeated movements. The
position of the head and neck were recorded by the
3Space Isotrak System using
markers placed over the spinous processes of
selected vertebrae and the
tragus of the ear. RESULTS. After the repeated
movements, no statistically
significant difference was found in neck retraction
range of motion, but a
statistically significant change in the resting neck
posture was detected.
CONCLUSIONS. Any changes in neck retraction range of
motion observed after the
execution of this maneuver in patients with neck pain
may be the result of changes
in a pathological process. If the postural change
were to occur in patients,
this treatment maneuver could be beneficial for those
attempting to maintain a more
retracted neck position for pain relief.
PMID: 7660232, UI: 95389278
1: J Orthop Sports Phys Ther
2000 Jan;30(1):13-20
Tender point sensitivity,
range of motion, and perceived disability in subjects
with neck pain.
Olson SL, O'Connor DP,
Birmingham G, Broman P, Herrera L
Texas Woman's University,
Houston Center 77030, USA. HF_2Olson@twu.edu
STUDY DESIGN: Descriptive
analysis of impairment and disability measures in
subjects with neck pain.
OBJECTIVES: To identify discrete tender points and
overall pressure sensitivity
and assess relationships among palpation
tenderness, active cervical
range of motion, visual analog scale pain scores,
and Sickness Impact Profile
disability scores. BACKGROUND: Palpation tenderness
and cervical range of motion
are used to evaluate patients with neck pain, but
their ability to predict
patient-perceived pain and disability is unknown.
METHODS AND MEASURES: We
studied 45 women and 15 men with neck pain (mean age,
35 +/- 7 years). Group 1
included 30 persons who had not sought treatment, and
group 2 included 30 persons
who had just been referred for treatment. RESULTS:
Subjects demonstrated low mean
pressure pain thresholds of tender points (2.3
+/- 1.3 kg). Regression
analysis showed that only neck flexion predicted pain
(R2 = 0.23), with decreased
flexion associated with higher pain levels. Sickness
Impact Profile total score was
predicted by neck rotation (R2 = 0.31), group (R2
= 0.16), tender point pressure
pain threshold (R2 = 0.04), and neck retraction
(R2 = 0.03). Decreased neck
rotation, neck retraction, and pressure pain
thresholds were associated
with higher disability. CONCLUSIONS: Neither
palpation tenderness nor
cervical range of motion were strong predictors of pain
and disability in subjects
with neck pain.
PMID: 10705592, UI: 20169770
1: Spine 1999 Feb
1;24(3):240-7
Cervical flexion, extension,
protrusion, and retraction. A radiographic
segmental analysis.
Ordway NR, Seymour RJ,
Donelson RG, Hojnowski LS, Edwards WT
Department of Orthopedic
Surgery, SUNY Health Science Center at Syracuse, USA.
ordwayn@hscsyr.edu
STUDY DESIGN: A lateral
radiographic analysis of the cervical spine was
performed on 20 asymptomatic
volunteers. OBJECTIVES: To quantify the
contribution of each cervical
segment to each of four sagittal cervical
end-range positions:
full-length flexion, full-length extension, protrusion, and
retraction. SUMMARY OF
BACKGROUND DATA: Recent clinical research supports the
relevance of cervical
protrusion and retraction in symptomatic patients.
Currently, few quantitative
studies are available regarding cervical protrusion
and retraction. METHODS:
Lateral cervical radiographs of 20 asymptomatic
volunteers for four test
positions and a neutral position were collected. Mean
angular measurements and
available ranges of motion were calculated from the
occiput to C7. RESULTS:
Retraction consists of lower cervical extension and
upper cervical flexion,
whereas protrusion consists of lower cervical flexion
and upper cervical extension.
Full-length cervical flexion produced more flexion
at lower segments than did
protrusion, and full-length cervical extension
produced more extension at
lower segments than did retraction. With both
full-length flexion and
retraction, upper cervical segments are positioned in
the flexion portion of their
total range, but only retraction takes Occ-C1 and
C1-C2 to their full end-range
of flexion. Similarly, with both full-length
extension and protrusion,
upper cervical segments are positioned in the
extension portion of their
total range, but only protrusion takes Occ-C1 and
C1-C2 to their end-range of
extension. CONCLUSION: A greater range of motion at
Occ-C1 and C1-C2 was found for
the protruded and retracted positions compared
with the full-length flexion
and full-length extension positions. Effects on
cervical symptoms reported to
occur in response to flexion, extension,
protrusion, and retraction
test movements may correspond with the position of
lower cervical segments.
PMID: 10025018, UI: 99149157
1: Spine 2000 Jul
1;25(13):1617-1624
The Biomechanical Effect of
Postoperative Hypolordosis in Instrumented Lumbar
Fusion on Instrumented and
Adjacent Spinal Segments.
Umehara S, Zindrick MR,
Patwardhan AG, Havey RM, Vrbos LA, Knight GW, Miyano S,
Kirincic M, Kaneda K, Lorenz
MA
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery and Rehabilitation, Loyola University Medical
Center, Maywood, Illinois, and
Biomechanics Laboratory, Rehabilitation Research
and Development Center,
Department of Veterans Affairs, Edward Hines, Jr.,
Hospital, Hines, Illinois, the
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Hokkaido
University School of Medicine,
Sapporo, Japan, Hinsdale Orthopedic Associates,
S.C., Hinsdale, Illinois, and
the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Sapporo
Medical University, Sapporo,
Japan.
[Record supplied by publisher]
STUDY DESIGN: Change in lumbar
lordosis was measured in patients that had
undergone posterolateral
lumbar fusions using transpedicular instrumentation.
The biomechanical effects of
postoperative lumbar malalignment were measured in
cadaveric specimens.
OBJECTIVES: To determine the extent of postoperative lumbar
sagittal malalignment caused
by an intraoperative kneeling position with 90
degrees of hip and knee
flexion, and to assess its effect on the mechanical
loading of the instrumented
and adjacent segments. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA:
The importance of maintaining
the baseline lumbar lordosis after surgery has
been stressed in the
literature. However, there are few objective data to
evaluate whether postoperative
hypolordosis in the instrumented segments can
increase the likelihood of
junctional breakdown. METHODS: Segmental lordosis was
measured on preoperative
standing, intraoperative prone, and postoperative
standing radiographs. In human
cadaveric spines, a lordosis loss of up to 8
degrees was created across
L4-S1 using calibrated transpedicular devices.
Specimens were tested in
extension and under axial loading in the upright
posture. RESULTS: In patients
who underwent L4-S1 fusions, the lordosis within
the fusion decreased by 10
degrees intraoperatively and after surgery.
Postoperative lordosis in the
proximal (L2-L3 and L3-L4) segments increased by 2
degrees each, as compared with
the preoperative measures. Hypolordosis in the
instrumented segments
increased the load across the posterior transpedicular
devices, the posterior shear
force, and the lamina strain at the adjacent level.
CONCLUSIONS: Hypolordosis in
the instrumented segments caused increased loading
of the posterior column of the
adjacent segments. These biomechanical effects
may explain the degenerative
changes at the junctional level that have been
observed as long-term
consequences of lumbar fusion.
PMID: 10870136
1: Spine 2000 Mar
1;25(5):543-50
Effects of specimen length on
the monosegmental motion behavior of the lumbar
spine.
Kettler A, Wilke HJ, Haid C,
Claes L
Department Unfallchirurgische
Forschung und Biomechanik, Universitat Ulm, Ulm,
Germany, and the Biomechanics
Laboratory, University Hospital of Orthopaedic
Surgery, Innsbruck, Austria.
[Medline record in process]
STUDY DESIGN: An in vitro
biomechanical analysis of the segmental motion
behavior of the same segments
in polysegmental (five segments), bisegmental, and
monosegmental specimens using
sheep lumbosacral spines. OBJECTIVES: To
investigate the effect of
specimen length on monosegmental motion behavior.
These data may be helpful in
planning in vitro tests and in comparing results of
studies using specimens of
different lengths. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: The
length of spinal specimens
used for in vitro stability tests varies greatly,
depending on the purpose of
the study. Some investigators prefer testing
specimens with one adjacent
segment on either end of the region of interest.
Others favor specimens as
short as possible. METHODS: In a first step, seven
sheep spine specimens, L3-S1
(note that sheep spines normally have seven lumbar
vertebrae), each were tested
without preload in a spine-loading apparatus.
Alternating sequences of pure
lateral bending, flexion/extension, and axial
rotation moments (+/-3.75 Nm)
were applied continuously. The motion in each
single segment was measured
simultaneously. Then, these polysegmental specimens
were cut into two bisegmental
specimens, L3-L5 and L6-S1, and tested in the same
way. Finally, another vertebra
was removed to obtain two monosegmental
specimens, L3-L4 and L7-S1,
and to test them as described. RESULTS: In general,
the range of motion at L3-L4
and L7-S1 was smaller when tested in polysegmental
than in monosegmental
specimens. In polysegmental specimens (five segments), the
range of motion at L3-L4 and
L7-S1 was approximately 80% (range, 70.6-92.5%) and
in bisegmental specimens
approximately 95% (range, 66.7-100%) of their range of
motion measured in
monosegmental specimens. Neutral zone and coupled motions
showed the inverse behavior.
Significant differences were found. However, they
were not consistent with
either the loading direction or with the specimen
length. CONCLUSIONS: For
comparison of results, the specimen length should be
kept constant within one
experiment. Segmental motion behavior of specimens with
different lengths should be
compared only qualitatively.
PMID: 10749629, UI: 20213544
1: Spine 2000 Feb
15;25(4):431-7; discussion 438
Effects of backward bending on
lumbar intervertebral discs. Relevance to
physical therapy treatments
for low back pain.
Adams MA, May S, Freeman BJ,
Morrison HP, Dolan P
Department of Anatomy,
University of Bristol, United Kingdom.
M.A.Adams@Bristol.ac.uk
STUDY DESIGN: Mechanical
testing of cadaveric motion segments. OBJECTIVES: To
test the hypothesis that
backward bending of the lumbar spine can reduce
compressive stresses within
lumbar intervertebral discs. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND
DATA: Lumbar extension affects
the distribution of compressive stress inside
normal cadaveric discs, but
little is known about its effect on mechanically
disrupted and degenerated
discs. METHODS: Nineteen lumbar motion segments (mean
donor age, 48 years) were
subjected to complex mechanical loading to simulate
the following postures:
moderate lumbar flexion, 2 degrees of extension, 4
degrees of extension, and the
neutral position (no bending). The distribution of
compressive stress within the
disc matrix was measured in each posture by
pulling a miniature pressure
transducer along the midsagittal diameter of the
disc. Stress profiles were
repeated after a mechanical treatment that was
intended to simulate severe
disc degeneration in vivo. RESULTS: The
"degeneration" treatment
reduced pressure in the nucleus pulposus and generated
stress concentrations within
the anulus, in a manner similar to that found in
severely degenerated discs in
vivo. When all discs were considered together, 2
degrees of extension increased
the maximum compressive stress within the
posterior anulus by an average
of 16%, compared with the neutral posture. The
size of localized stress peaks
within the posterior anulus was increased by 43%
(P = 0.02). In 4 degrees of
extension, changes observed between 0 degree and 2
degrees were usually
exaggerated. In contrast, moderate flexion tended to
equalize the distribution of
compressive stress. In 7 of the 19 discs, 2 degrees
of lumbar extension decreased
maximum compressive stress in the posterior anulus
relative to the neutral
posture by up to 40%. Linear regression showed that
lumbar extension tended to
reduce stresses in the posterior anulus in those
discs that exhibited the
lowest compressive stresses in the neutral posture (P =
0.003; R2 = 41%). CONCLUSIONS:
The posterior anulus can be stress shielded by
the neural arch in extended
postures, but the effect is variable. This may
explain why extension
exercises can relieve low back pain in some patients.
PMID: 10707387, UI: 20172378
1: Spine 1996 Dec
1;21(23):2753-7
Migration of the nucleus
pulposus within the intervertebral disc during flexion
and extension of the spine.
Fennell AJ, Jones AP, Hukins
DW
Surgicraft Ltd, Rcdditch,
England.
STUDY DESIGN: Magnetic
resonance images were obtained of the lumbar spines of
three volunteers in neutral,
flexed, and extended postures. OBJECTIVES: To
measure migration of the
nucleus pulposus within the intervertebral disc during
flexion and extension of the
spine in living people. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA:
Results of experiments on
bisected cadaveric spines have indicated that the
nucleus migrates posteriorly
during flexion and anteriorly during extension in
nondegenerate discs.
Degenerate discs may have faults or fissures that result in
abnormal motion of the
nucleus. METHODS: Proton density weighted, sagittal,
magnetic resonance images were
obtained from the lumbar spines of three
volunteers. Measurements of
the positions of the anterior and posterior margins
of the nucleus and of flexion
and extension angles were made on tracings of the
images corresponding to
neutral, flexed, and extended postures. RESULTS: The
observed frequency (22 of 24
measurements) at which the margins of the nucleus
migrated in the directions
predicted by results of cadaveric studies was
significantly greater than the
frequency that would be expected by chance (P <
0.001). The two exceptions may
be a result of disc degeneration. There was a
significant (P < 0.05) linear
correlation between the migration of the anterior
margin and the
flexion-extension angle and a highly significant (P < 0.001)
correlation for the posterior
margin and the flexion-extension angle.
CONCLUSIONS: Flexion of an
intervertebral disc in a living person tends to be
accompanied by posteriorly
directed migration of the nucleus pulposus within the
disc. Extension tends to be
accompanied by an anteriorly directed migration.
PMID: 8979321, UI: 97133926
1: Spine 1998 Aug
1;23(15):1677-83
In vivo human cervical spinal
cord deformation and displacement in flexion.
Yuan Q, Dougherty L, Margulies
SS
Department of Bioengineering,
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA.
STUDY DESIGN: In vivo,
quasi-static distortion of the human cervical spinal cord
was measured in five
volunteers during flexion of the neck using a
motion-tracking magnetic
resonance imaging technique. OBJECTIVES: To measure
cord distortion and movement
in living subjects. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: In
situ spinal cord measurements
in human and rhesus monkey cadavers taken at full
flexion demonstrate that the
entire cervical cord elongates approximately 10% of
its length at a neutral
position, but no data are available at other angles of
flexion, or in living
subjects. METHODS: The spatial modulation of magnetization
pulse sequence created a
series of parallel lines in the image that deform with
the tissue. A custom-designed
device was built to guide the flexion of the neck
and enhance motion
reproducibility. Midsagittal plane images were acquired
before and after flexion. The
tagged line pattern in each pair of magnetic
resonance images was compared
to compute distortion and movement of the cervical
spinal cord at varying degrees
of flexion. RESULTS: Between a neutral posture
and full flexion, the entire
cord (C2-C7) elongated linearly with head flexion,
increasing 10% and 6% of its
initial length along the posterior and anterior
surfaces, respectively.
Average displacement was on the order of 1-3 mm, and
varied with region.
Specifically, the upper cord showed caudad movement in the
spinal canal, and the lower
cord moved cephalad, again with larger movements on
the posterior surface.
CONCLUSIONS: The cervical cord elongates and displaces
significantly during head
flexion in human volunteers, offering valuable
information regarding the
normal milieu of the cord.
PMID: 9704375, UI: 98369998
@@@@1: Spine 1994 Oct
1;19(19):2174-8; discussion 2178-9
Spinal cord intramedullary
pressure. A possible factor in syrinx growth.
Tachibana S, Kitahara Y, Iida
H, Yada K
Department of Neurosurgery,
Kitasato University, Sagamihara, Japan.
STUDY DESIGN. This study
analyzed biomechanical characteristics of the cervical
spinal cord, especially in
relation to neck flexion. Intramedullary pressure was
measured in different neck
positions. OBJECTIVES. The results provided a
rationale for dynamic changes
in intramedullary pressure, with the flexed neck
position playing a role in
syrinx growth. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA. Dynamic
changes in intramedullary
pressure in the flexed position have been postulated
to play an important role in
syrinx growth. However, intramedullary pressure of
the spinal cord has not been
measured. METHODS. The authors designed a balloon
method to assess,
experimentally, intramedullary pressure dynamics of the spinal
cord. A system was
incorporated to examine the reliability of the balloons.
Using 15 mongrel dogs, two
balloons were embedded in the cervical spinal cord.
Intramedullary pressure of the
spinal cord was measured in several neck
positions. In 5 of them, the
same measurements were repeated when the spinal
cord and roots were
transected. RESULTS. When filled with a suitable volume of
water, the balloons faithfully
transmitted the pressure of the environment. No
pressure differences were
observed with the neck in the extended or neutral
positions. However, when the
neck was flexed, intramedullary pressure
significantly increased. This
increase in intramedullary pressure in the flexed
neck position was not observed
after spinal cord and roots were transected.
CONCLUSION. The results
indicated that the intramedullary pressure of the
cervical spinal cord increases
when the neck is flexed. This phenomenon might
play an important role in
syrinx growth.
PMID: 7809750, UI: 95108699
@@@@1: Arch Phys Med Rehabil
1992 Mar;73(3):295-6
Intermittent cervical
traction: a progenitor of lumbar radicular pain.
LaBan MM, Macy JA, Meerschaert
JR
Department of Physical
Medicine and Rehabilitation, William Beaumont Hospital,
Royal Oak, MI 48073-5000.
Twelve patients treated with
cervical traction for complaints of cervical
radicular pain subsequently
developed lumbar radicular discomfort. Intermittent
cervical traction therapy had
been initiated at 15 pounds and increased to 30
pounds. Lumbar spine
roentgenographs in four patients demonstrated a
transitional lumbar vertebrae
and ten patients had evidence of spinal
osteoarthritis with associated
degenerative changes. Abnormal
electroneuromyographs were
found in four patients. In two additional patients
with normal electromyographs,
the spinal evoked potentials were asymmetrically
slowed suggesting chronic
lumbar root compromise. The onset of lumbar
radiculopathy after
intermittent cervical traction suggests that axial tension
induced in the spinal cord's
dural coverings can be transmitted to lumbar nerve
roots. When these structures
are tethered by anatomic variants and/or associated
degenerative changes, spinal
root excursion may be limited, and lumbar pain may
be precipitated by traction.
PMID: 1531917, UI: 92181316
1: Chung Hua Wai Ko Tsa Chih
1993 Aug;31(8):460-4
[Effect of movement of
cervical spine on compressed spinal cord-meningeal
complex].
[Article in Chinese]
Chen DY
Changzheng Hospital, Shanghai.
The compression of spinal
cord-meningeal complex after the injury of cervical
spine was simulated in seven
intact fresh adult cadaver spines. In this study, a
hole was drilled from the
anterior part to the posterior in vertebral body C6 to
accommodate a transducer which
was pushed into the canal. The measurement of the
pressure on the spinal
cord-meningeal complex was made in different canal
acclusion during the
extension-flexion and rotation movements of the cervical
spine. The results showed that
the flexion and axial rotation of the cervical
spine increased damage stress
to the spinal cord under compression. The
distribution of the stress on
the spinal cord was discussed, and the strict
immobilization and keeping the
cervical spine in the natural-extension position
were recommended for the
injury of cervical spine.
PMID: 8112169, UI: 94155693
1: Z Orthop Ihre Grenzgeb 1997
May-Jun;135(3):210-6
[Shape transformations of the
lumbar spine in relation to passive extension of
the lower extremities in the
sagittal level].
[Article in German]
Schramm JC, Witte H, Recknagel
S, Busching K, Kramer J, Preuschoft H
Orthopadische Klinik
Volmarstein, Ruhr-Universitat Bochum.
PROBLEM: The interdependencies
between movements of the thighs and the lumbar
vertebral shape are of high
practical interest. Which are the normals of this
phenomenon? METHOD: In an
experiment on 107 volunteers without before known
spinal disorders and
complaints of back pain (47 f, 60 m, 17 a-30 a), the
interdependencies between
movements of the thighs in the sagittal and the lumbar
back profile were analysed.
Hip joint movements were provoked by a lift jack,
elevating the feet to the
volunteers, which sat on a bicycle chair. The hip
joint flexion was measured by
a Zebris CMS 50. The sagittal profile of the lower
back was sensed by a comb of
steel needles with low friction support. RESULTS:
At 30 degrees of hip flexion,
68% of the volunteers demonstrated a kyphotic, 17%
a straight and 15% a lordotic
lumbar shape. Starting at 90 degrees of hip
flexion, "definitively
kyphosating movements" of the lumbar motion segments
occur. At the end of the
motion, 89% of the volunteers had a kyphotic, 3% a
straight and 8% a lordotic
lumbar configuration. Each 2 degrees of additional
hip joint flexion
caudo-cranially one more lumbar motion segment is recruited
for the definitive kyphosation
of the lumbar spine. CONCLUSIONS: Instead of a
"physiological shape of the
lumbar spine" its "physiological function" or its
"physiological interaction
between shape und function" should be in the focus of
future discussions. In the
sitting, hip joint flexion leads to a coupled motion
of the thighs, the pelvic
girdle and the lumbar vertebral column with the
consequence of a kyphosation
of the lumbar back shape.
PMID: 9334074, UI: 97410417
1: Surg Radiol Anat
1989;11(4):313-22
Dynamics of the junction
between the medulla and the cervical spinal cord: an in
vivo study in the sagittal
plane by magnetic resonance imaging.
Doursounian L, Alfonso JM,
Iba-Zizen MT, Roger B, Cabanis EA, Meininger V,
Pineau H
Service de Chirugie,
Hotel-Dieu, Paris, France.
Sagittal sections of the
brain-stem made by MRI reveal differences in the angle
formed by the medulla and the
cord. In order to study the normal mobility of
this region of the CNS during
flexion and extension of the head, sagittal MRI
studies were made in the
sagittal plane in 18 young volunteers. The volunteers
were in dorsal decubitus with
the cervical spine first flexed and then extended,
with the movement localized to
the cranio-cervical junction as far as possible.
T1-weighted sequences were
used, with body coils in 16 cases and surface coils
in two. Measurements were
related to global cranio-cervical range of movement,
movement at the
cranio-cervical junction and spino-medullary movement.
Variations in the depth of the
free space in front of the medulla, pons and
spinal cord during movement
were also noted. We also checked for downward shift
of the lower part of the 4th
ventricle and modification of the shape of the
ventricle during
flexion-extension. The global range of cranio-cervical
movement
was between 31 and 100 degrees
(average 63 degrees). The range between the
cranium and C1C2 was 4 to 39
degrees (average 19 degrees) and the
spino-medullary range was from
1 to 32 degrees (average 14 degrees). During
flexion, the free space
narrowed in front of the pons 11 times, in front of the
medulla 14 times and in front
of the cervical cord 11 times. There was a
downward shift of the lower
part of the 4th ventricle during flexion in 4 cases
but no change in shape was
noted. Though this study is open to criticism from
several aspects, it may be
concluded that variations of the spino-medullary
angle in the sagittal plane
during flexion-extension do occur, that they are
closely correlated with
movements at the cranio-cervical junction, moves forward
during flexion.
PMID: 2617414, UI: 90141021
1: Hum Factors 1989
Dec;31(6):679-88
Effects of seat slope and hip
flexion on spinal angles in sitting.
Bridger RS, Von
Eisenhart-Rothe C, Henneberg M
Lumbar and thoracic spinal
angles of 25 male and 25 female subjects were
measured in four sitting
postures, with standing angles used as reference.
Subjects sat with either 90
deg or 65 deg of hip flexion on either flat or
forward-sloping seats. Lumbar
kyphosis was greatest when the flat seat/90-deg
posture was adopted and least
when the sloping seat/65-deg posture was adopted.
The opposite was observed for
the thoracic angles, and intermediate results were
observed for the other two
sitting postures. No statistically significant
interactions were observed
among seat slope, hip flexion, and subject sex. The
findings are discussed with
reference to the anatomy of sitting and factors
influencing pelvic tilt and
the implications for the ergonomic design of chairs.
PMID: 2635135, UI: 90243278
1: Radiology 1994
Jul;192(1):117-21
Oscillatory motion of the
normal cervical spinal cord.
Mikulis DJ, Wood ML, Zerdoner
OA, Poncelet BP
Department of Radiology,
Toronto Hospital-Western Division, Ontario, Canada.
PURPOSE: To determine the
normal pattern of cervical spinal cord motion with
measurement of cervical spinal
cord velocity by means of phase-contrast magnetic
resonance (MR) imaging.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Spinal cord velocity was measured
in 11 healthy subjects with a
modified gradient-echo pulse sequence on a
conventional 1.5-T MR imaging
system that generated phase images sensitive to
slow motion. Prospective
electrocardiogram gating was used to assess velocity as
a function of the cardiac
cycle. The accuracy of velocity measurements was
estimated with images of a
phantom moving at constant velocity. RESULTS: The
cervical spinal cord moves
with an oscillatory pattern in the craniocaudal
direction. The maximum
velocity (7.0 mm/sec +/- 1.4 [standard deviation]) in the
caudal direction occurred
approximately 109 msec +/- 20 after electrical cardiac
systole. The maximum
velocities in subsequent oscillations decreased toward zero
before the next cardiac
systole. CONCLUSION: The cervical spinal cord oscillates
in a craniocaudal direction
after each cardiac systole.
PMID: 8208922, UI: 94269272
1: Invest Radiol 1998
Mar;33(3):141-5
Transition of the craniocaudal
velocity of the spinal cord: from cervical
segment to lumbar enlargement.
Tanaka H, Sakurai K, Kashiwagi
N, Fujita N, Hirabuki N, Inaba F, Harada K,
Nakamura H
Department of Radiology, Osaka
University Medical School, Suita, Japan.
RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES: The
authors investigate the craniocaudal velocity of
the spinal cord over its full
length by using magnetic resonance imaging.
METHODS: A spin-echo pulse
sequence with velocity encoding gradients was used to
examine five normal
volunteers. Oblique-axial phase images at nine levels, from
cervical spinal cord to lumbar
enlargement, were obtained with prospective
electrocardiogram gating.
Time-velocity curves were then generated for these
levels. RESULTS: Every part of
the spinal cord moves first caudally after the
R-wave of the
electrocardiogram, then cranially. When compared with the
cranial
levels, peak velocity tend to
occur later and their values tend to be smaller at
the more caudal levels.
CONCLUSIONS: Craniocaudal velocity is transmitted from
cervical segment to lumbar
enlargement.
PMID: 9525752, UI: 98184666
1: Spine 1996 Jun
1;21(11):1313-9
Changes in cervical canal
spinal volume during in vitro flexion-extension.
Holmes A, Han ZH, Dang GT,
Chen ZQ, Wang ZG, Fang J
Mechanics Department, Peking
University, Beijing, People's Republic of China.
STUDY DESIGN. Quasistatic
flexion and extension loads were applied in vitro to
lower cervical spines. The
flexion-extension motion produced was checked for
physiologic relevance.
OBJECTIVES. To examine the changes in the volume of the
cervical spinal canal in
flexion-extension motion. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA.
Many papers have been
published concerning the cervical canal volume as inferred
from standard lateral
radiographs. This study compares the inferred
(radiographic) volumes and
their changes to the physical changes within the
spinal canal. METHODS. The
lower cervical spines (C2-C7) from 10 cadavers were
subject to stepwise flexion
and extension in a purpose-built rig. Before this
testing, the spinal cord was
removed from the canal space of each specimen and
replaced by a thin latex tube
stoppered and secured at the opening of the canal
(at C2) so that the volume of
liquid displaced from the tube could be measured.
This was done at each loading
stage by means of a graduated glass column, and a
radiograph of the spine was
also taken to allow angular and displacement
readings to be taken from C2
to C7. RESULTS. The average recorded change in
volume of the spinal canal
with flexion-extension motion was 1.9 ml, and showed
a significant linear
correlation with the dynamic canal width (r = 0.868, P <
0.05) and also with the total
angle of flexion or extension (r = 0.979, P <
0.005). The volume of liquid
displaced from the canal in lateral bending was
much lower than that in
flexion-extension motion, and only amounted to about 0.2
ml. The angular ranges of
motion produced at each level were compared to
previous results obtained in
vivo, and no significant differences between the
angular displacements found in
vivo and in vitro under this experimental
arrangement were seen.
CONCLUSIONS. The loading regime described in this study
causes angular displacements
similar to those in vivo, and on this basis is a
physiologically relevant
loading pattern. The change in the volume of the spinal
canal between C2 and C7 shows
linear relationships with the angle of flexion and
the dynamic canal width.
PMID: 8725922, UI: 96338945
1: Rinsho Shinkeigaku 1994
Oct;34(10):996-1002
[Pathomechanism of juvenile
muscular atrophy of unilateral upper extremity
(Hirayama's
disease)--extensibility and asymmetry of the cervical
posterior
dural wall].
[Article in Japanese]
Tokumaru Y, Hirayama K
Department of Neurology,
School of Medicine, Chiba University.
We performed myelography in
chin-up position during neck flexion in 20 patients
with juvenile muscular atrophy
of unilateral upper extremity, and we also
performed CT-myelography in
rotational position during neck flexion in 15 of
them. In this disease, in
which posterior lower cervical dural wall shifts
anteriorly and compresses the
spinal cord during neck flexion, we found that the
anterior dural shift and cord
compression became lessened by making chin-up
without changing the position
of neck flexion. By measuring the posterior dural
length from foramen magnum to
C6 vertebra on the profile of myelogram in neutral
and neck flexion posture, we
found that the posterior lower cervical dural wall
of this disease was less
extensible during neck flexion than that of control
cases. On CT-myelogram the
spinal cord compression of muscularly atrophic side
increased by the neck rotation
to the non-atrophic side during neck flexion,
which is the position of
maximum extension of posterior dural wall. The spinal
cord compression decreased by
the rotation to the atrophic side. We think that
the low extensibility and
asymmetry of posterior lower cervical dural wall may
be the cause of this disease
and its laterality may be relevant to unilaterality
of this disease. These
findings could also explain the efficacy of cervical
immobilization by using
cervical coller.
PMID: 7834961, UI: 95136585
Lumbar spinal cord motion
measurement with phase-contrast MR imaging in normal children
and in children with spinal lipomas.
Brunelle F, Sebag G, Baraton
J, Carteret M, Martinat P, Pierre-Kahn A
Pediatr Radiol
1996;26(4):265-70
Service de Radiologie, Hopital
Enfants Malades, 149 rue de Sevres, F-75743 Paris Cedex 15,
France.
We assessed the normal
movement of the lumbar spinal cord using phase-contrast MR
imaging,
and also the movement of the
spinal cord in patients with spinal lipoma pre- and
postoperatively.
Phase-contrast MR imaging
proved to be a valuable tool in this context.
1: Nippon Seikeigeka Gakkai
Zasshi 1993 Apr;67(4):275-88
[Effects of caudal traction of
the spinal cord on evoked spinal cord potentials
in the cat].
[Article in Japanese]
Ikai T
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, School of Medicine, Keio University, Tokyo,
Japan.
This study attempts clarify
the mechanism of neurological deficits in tethered
cord syndrome using evoked
spinal cord potentials (ESCPs). ESCPs in response to
both sciatic nerve (SN-ESCP)
and spinal cord stimulation (SC-DESCP) were
recorded from the dorsal
epidural space. With a fixed degree of caudal traction
on the spinal cord in ten cats
for 2-4 hours, ESCPs were increased in amplitude
in the N1 and N2 deflections
of the SC-DESCPs to 158% and 154% at L5 and
decreased to 91% and 76% after
transient augmentation at L3. On the other hand,
the amplitude in the N1
deflection of the SN-ESCPs at L3 and L5 was decreased to
40% and 68%. These findings
suggest that not only the force but also the
duration of traction influence
the degree of the spinal cord dysfunction. When
the spinal cords of 17 cats
received compression with traction and without
traction, the SN-ESCPs of the
former became positive earlier than that of the
latter. The extent of the
recovery in amplitude of both SC-DESCPs and SN-ESCPs
propagated over compression
site was far limited in the former than in the
latter. These results would
indicate that the spinal cord subjected to traction
is vulnerable to compression.
PMID: 8320479, UI: 93308412
1: Nippon Seikeigeka Gakkai
Zasshi 1988 Apr;62(4):359-68
[An experimental study of
spinal cord traction syndrome].
[Article in Japanese]
Fujita Y, Yamamoto H, Tani T
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, Kochi Medical School.
An experimental study was
carried out on the pathophysiology of spinal cord
traction syndrome. In fifty
dogs, spinal cord traction impairment was created by
gradual lumbosacral cord
traction. Physiological integrity of the spinal cord
was monitored and recorded by
the spinal evoked potentials. The earliest change
of the spinal evoked
potentials and lumbar roots potentials was transient
augmentation of the amplitude.
With greater traction force, the potentials
gradually decreased in
amplitude. The spinal cord vulnerability to compression
was increased by spinal cord
traction. Under 200 g traction, the vulnerability
of the lower thoracic cord was
most increased while those of the upper thoracic
and lumbar cord were
unchanged. The authors conclude that tethered cord syndrome
is caused by the impairment of
the spinal cord and lumbosacral roots due to
traction, and that spinal cord
traction not only causes spinal cord impairment
but increases the spinal cord
vulnerability to compression.
PMID: 3404013, UI: 88299739
1: Neuroradiology
1988;30(6):538-44
Dynamics of the spinal cord:
an analysis of functional myelography by CT scan.
Ishida Y, Suzuki K, Ohmori K
Department of Orthopaedic
Surgery, Nagoya Daini Red Cross Hospital, Japan.
The antero-posterior movement
of the spinal cord with flexion and extension of
the neck was analyzed in order
to clarify the mechanism of spinal cord
compression in cases with
postoperative spinal deformity, and to contribute to
the improvement of the
surgical methods of conventional laminectomy. The control
subjects were 47 cases without
cervico-thoracic neurological symptoms, who
underwent CT myelography in
flexion and extension of the neck; the cervical
spinal cord was examined in 27
of these cases and the thoracic cord in the other
20. CT myelography was also
carried out in 16 patients with cervical myelopathy
and in 5 patients after
posterior decompression surgery (suspension laminotomy).
CT sections in flexion and
extension of the neck were analyzed for 1) change of
configuration of the dura
mater and the spinal cord, and 2) antero-posterior
shift of the spinal cord in
the subarachnoid space. In the control subjects, the
configuration of the dura
mater was slightly flattened at C5/6, C6 and C6/7 in
extension of the neck. The
cervical spinal cord shifted anteriorly in flexion
and posteriorly in extension
of the neck, and was flattened at the midcervical
level in flexion in the
control subjects. There was a statistically significant
correlation between the
location of the spinal cord and the adjacent
intervertebral angles at the
levels of C4, C5 and C6. These results were
compared with the results from
the 16 patients with cervical myelopathy and 5
patients after suspension
laminotomy.
PMID: 3226542, UI: 89144032
1: Am J Crit Care 1993
Jan;2(1):68-71
Effects of neck position on
intracranial pressure.
Williams A, Coyne SM
College of Nursing, Arizona
State University, Tempe 85287-2602.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the
effects of four nonneutral neck positions on
intracranial pressure. DESIGN:
An alternating treatment design was used to
investigate the effect on
intracranial pressure of rotation of the head to the
left and right, neck flexion
and neck extension. Each experimental position was
separated by a neutral
recovery period. SETTING: Neurological intensive care
units in two tertiary care
centers in the southwestern United States. SUBJECTS:
Ten patients whose
intracranial pressure was being therapeutically monitored but
who were not experiencing
prolonged periods of elevated intracranial pressure.
PROCEDURE: Each neck position
was maintained manually by the research staff for
5 minutes. Intracranial
pressure was recorded at 1-minute intervals throughout
the 45-minute data collection
period. RESULTS: Rotating the head to the right
and left and placing the neck
in flexion resulted in significantly higher
intracranial pressure readings
than the baseline neutral neck position or
positioning the neck in
extension. The highest individual intracranial pressures
always occurred with the head
and neck rotated or in flexion. CONCLUSIONS: These
data support previous studies
that indicated that a patient at risk for
pathological increase in
intracranial pressure should not be positioned with the
neck in flexion or the head
turned to either side.
PMID: 8353582, UI: 93357936
1: J Neurosurg Anesthesiol
2000 Jan;12(1):10-4
Effects of neck position and
head elevation on intracranial pressure in
anaesthetized neurosurgical
patients: preliminary results.
Mavrocordatos P, Bissonnette
B, Ravussin P
Department of Anesthesiology
and Critical Care, Hopital de Sion, Switzerland.
This study reports the
collective effect of the positions of the operating
table, head, and neck on
intracranial pressure (ICP) of 15 adult patients
scheduled for elective
intracerebral surgery. Patients were anesthetized with
propofol, fentanyl, and
maintained with a propofol infusion and fentanyl.
Intracranial pressure was
recorded following 20 minutes of stabilization after
induction at different table
positions (neutral, 30 degrees head up, 30 degrees
head down) with the patient's
neck either 1) straight in the axis of the body,
2) flexed, or 3) extended, and
in the five following head positions: a) head
straight, b) head angled at 45
degrees to the right, c) head angled at 45
degrees to the left, d) head
rotated to the right, or e) head rotated the left.
For ethical reasons, only
patients with ICP < or = 20 mm Hg were included.
Intracranial pressure
increased every time the head was in a nonneutral
position. The most important
and statistically significant increases in ICP were
recorded when the table was in
a 30 degree Trendelenburg position with the head
straight or rotated to the
right or left, or every time the head was flexed and
rotated to the right or
left-whatever the position of the table was. These
observations suggest that
patients with known compromised cerebral compliance
would benefit from monitoring
ICP during positioning, if the use of a lumbar
drainage is planed to improve
venous return, cerebral blood volume, ICP, and
overall operating conditions.
Publication Types:
Clinical trial
Randomized controlled trial
PMID: 10636614, UI: 20100569
:
Tanaka H, Sakurai K, Kashiwagi
N, Fujita N, Hirabuki N, Inaba F, Harada K, Nakamura H.
Transition of the craniocaudal
velocity of the spinal cord: from cervical segment to lumbar
enlargement.
Invest Radiol. 1998
Mar;33(3):141-5.
2 :
Mikulis DJ, Wood ML,
Zerdoner OA, Poncelet BP.
Oscillatory motion of the
normal cervical spinal cord.
Radiology. 1994
Jul;192(1):117-21.
PMID: 8208922; UI: 94269272
3 :
Tanaka H, Sakurai K, Iwasaki
M, Harada K, Inaba F, Hirabuki N, Nakamura H.
Craniocaudal motion velocity
in the cervical spinal cord in degenerative disease as shown
by MR
imaging.
Acta Radiol. 1997
Sep;38(5):803-9.
PMID: 9332234; UI: 97473380
4 :
Stroman PW, Nance PW, Ryner
LN.
BOLD MRI of the human cervical
spinal cord at 3 tesla.
Magn Reson Med. 1999
Sep;42(3):571-6.
PMID: 10467302; UI: 99398570
5 :
Clark CA, Barker GJ, Tofts PS.
Magnetic resonance diffusion
imaging of the human cervical spinal cord in vivo.
Magn Reson Med. 1999
Jun;41(6):1269-73.
6 :
Koschorek F, Jensen HP, Terwey
B.
Dynamic studies of cervical
spinal canal and spinal cord by magnetic resonance imaging.
Acta Radiol Suppl.
1986;369:727-9.
7 :
Morikawa K.
Phase-contrast magnetic
resonance imaging study on cord motion in patients with spinal
dysraphism: comparison with
healthy subjects.
Osaka City Med J. 1999
Jun;45(1):89-107.
PMID: 10723204; UI: 20188171
8 :
Yuan Q, Dougherty L, Margulies
SS.
In vivo human cervical spinal
cord deformation and displacement in flexion.
Spine. 1998 Aug
1;23(15):1677-83.
PMID: 9704375; UI: 98369998
9 :
Rao GS.
Anatomical studies on the
ovine spinal cord.
Anat Anz. 1990;171(4):261-4.
Shimamura M.
[Plasticity of the spinal
cord function].
Nippon Rinsho. 1975
Oct;33(10):2938-42. Japanese. No abstract available.
PMID: 1239533; UI: 76098173
11 :
Levy LM, Di Chiro G,
McCullough DC, Dwyer AJ, Johnson DL, Yang SS.
Fixed spinal cord: diagnosis
with MR imaging.
Radiology. 1988
Dec;169(3):773-8.
PMID: 3186999; UI: 89042824
12 :
Maruyama Y, Shimoji K, Shimizu
H, Kuribayashi H, Fujioka H.
Human spinal cord potentials
evoked by different sources of stimulation and conduction
velocities
along the cord.
J Neurophysiol. 1982
Nov;48(5):1098-107. No abstract available.
PMID:
7175560; UI: 83084965
13 :
Kobrine AI, Evans D, Rizzoli
HV.
Related Articles
The mechanisms of
autoregulation in the spinal cord.
Surg
Forum. 1976;27(62):468-9. No abstract available.
PMID:
828321; UI: 77128122
14 :
Aitken
SC, Lal S.
Related Articles
A
histological study of the lumbar spinal cord of the rabbit.
J
Physiol (Lond). 1977 Aug;270(1):2P-3P. No abstract available.
PMID:
915772; UI: 78028597
15 :
Yoshizawa T, Nose T, Moore GJ, Sillerud LO.
Related Articles
Functional magnetic resonance
imaging of motor activation in the human cervical spinal cord.
Neuroimage. 1996 Dec;4(3 Pt
1):174-82.
PMID:
9345507; UI: 98005367
16 :
Mortillaro M, Emser W.
Related Articles
[Evoked potentials from the
cervical spinal cord].
Med
Welt. 1974 Oct 18;25(42):1690-3. German. No abstract
available.
PMID:
4431307; UI: 75044684
17 :
Bergmans J, Colle J.
Related Articles
[Study
of presynaptic inhibition phenomena at the level of the
cervical and lumbar regions of the
spinal
cord in the frog].
Arch
Int Physiol Biochim. 1964 Sep;72(4):724-6. French. No abstract
available.
PMID:
4157747; UI: 66008870
18 :
Shakudo M, Takemoto K, Inoue Y, Onoyama Y, Nishimura M,
Fujita M.
Related Articles
MR
imaging of multiple sclerosis in the cervical cord.
Radiat
Med. 1987 Nov-Dec;5(6):195-7.
PMID:
3452849; UI: 88263498
19 :
Heavner JE.
Related Articles
The
spinal cord dorsal horn.
Anesthesiology. 1973 Jan;38(1):1-3. No abstract available.
PMID:
4681944; UI: 73051252
20 :
Hitchcock E.
Related Articles
Letter:
Spinal cord recordings.
J
Neurosurg. 1974 Jun;40(6):791. No abstract available.
PMID:
4826609; UI: 74158049
Amyotrophic cervical
myelopathy in adolescence.
Toma S, Shiozawa Z
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry
1995 Jan;58(1):56-64
Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, Chiba
University, Japan.
The clinical and radiological
features in seven patients who had asymmetric muscular atrophy
of
the hand and forearm when
young are reported and a new hypothesis for its aetiology is
proposed. Investigation of
body growth curves (a surrogate for velocity of arm growth)
showed
close relation between (a) the
age when the body height increased most rapidly and the onset
age
of this disorder, and (b) the
age when the rapid body growth period ended and the age when
symptom progression ceased.
Cervical radiological evidence is provided showing asymmetric
anterior cord atrophy,
disappearance of slackness of dorsal roots in neck extension,
and anterior
and lateral displacement of
the lower cervical cord against the posterior aspects of the
vertebral
bodies during neck flexion.
These results suggest that disproportionate shortening of the
dorsal
roots is further accentuated
during the juvenile growth spurt, which determines the onset
and self
limited course of the
condition, and that repeated neck flexion causes micro-trauma
and relative
ischaemia of anterior horn
cells, which finally results in atrophy of the muscles
innervated by
motoneurons with long axons.
Predisposing anatomical factors are a straight neck due to
lack of
physiological cervical
lordosis and the presence of foreshortened dorsal
roots.
Spinal cord velocity
Toma S, Shiozawa Z
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry
1995 Jan;58(1):56-64
Department of Physiology,
School of Medicine, Chiba University, Japan.
The clinical and radiological
features in seven patients who had asymmetric muscular atrophy
of
the hand and forearm when
young are reported and a new hypothesis for its aetiology is
proposed. Investigation of
body growth curves (a surrogate for velocity of arm growth)
showed
close relation between (a) the
age when the body height increased most rapidly and the onset
age
of this disorder, and (b) the
age when the rapid body growth period ended and the age when
symptom progression ceased.
Cervical radiological evidence is provided showing asymmetric
anterior cord atrophy,
disappearance of slackness of dorsal roots in neck extension,
and anterior
and lateral displacement of
the lower cervical cord against the posterior aspects of the
vertebral
bodies during neck flexion.
These results suggest that disproportionate shortening of the
dorsal
roots is further accentuated
during the juvenile growth spurt, which determines the onset
and self
limited course of the
condition, and that repeated neck flexion causes micro-trauma
and relative
ischaemia of anterior horn
cells, which finally results in atrophy of the muscles
innervated by
motoneurons with long axons.
Predisposing anatomical factors are a straight neck due to
lack of
physiological cervical
lordosis and the presence of foreshortened dorsal roots.
PMID:
7823068, UI: 95123375
MR imaging of cerebrospinal
fluid flow and spinal cord motion in neurologic disorders of
the spine.
Levy LM
Magn Reson Imaging Clin N Am
1999 Aug;7(3):573-87
Neuroimaging Branch, National
Institutes of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National
Institutes of Health,
Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
In summary, MR imaging of CSF
and cord motion helps to evaluate diseases affecting cord and
CSF motion and to identify the
specific pathophysiology involved. A number of significant
points
have been made. First, MR
imaging flow studies can be useful in evaluating CSF spaces
and
cystic diseases. Second,
longitudinal and transverse motions occur in the spinal cord
and CSF.
Traveling wave motion occurs
along the length of the spinal cord. Third, spinal cord
tethering is
associated with decreased cord
velocity and loss of cord displacement at tethering site.
Decreased transverse
velocities occur with lateral cord tethering to the spinal
canal. Fourth, in
spinal dysraphism,
longitudinal cord velocity is decreased by tethering, and is
normal in
asymptomatic patients with low
conus. Normal cord motion helps to rule out possible tethering
in
symptomatic dysraphism with
hydromyelia. Fifth, in acquired and nonmyelodysplastic
symptomatic tethering, spinal
cord motion is decreased. Sixth, in symptomatic cord
compression,
CSF flow and cord motion
decrease, but recover after surgical decompression and after
compensatory atrophy. Seventh,
in asymptomatic spinal stenosis, cord motion is normal or
increased. Diffuse spinal
stenosis with cord atrophy leads to diffuse cord acceleration
and
prolonged cord caudal
velocity, possibly related to the loss of the transverse
mobility of the cord.
Finally, focal spinal stenosis
leads to focal dynamic cord deformation and can be associated
with
prominent intramedullary
deformations. When compression is severe or symptomatic, cord
motion is significantly
decreased. Postoperative cases demonstrate good recovery of
cord and
CSF motion, unless compression
or obstruction is still present. |