Predicting Factors at Skeletal Maturity for Curve Progression and Low Back Pain in Adult Patients Treated Nonoperatively for Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis With Thoracolumbar/Lumbar Curves A Mean 25-year Follow-up

被引:35
|
作者
Ohashi, Masayuki [1 ]
Watanabe, Kei [1 ]
Hirano, Toru [1 ]
Hasegawa, Kazuhiro [2 ]
Katsumi, Keiichi [3 ]
Shoji, Hirokazu [1 ]
Mizouchi, Tatsuki [1 ]
Endo, Naoto [1 ]
机构
[1] Niigata Univ, Div Orthoped Surg, Dept Regenerat & Transplant Med, Grad Sch Med & Dent Sci, Niigata, Japan
[2] Niigata Spine Surg Ctr, Niigata, Japan
[3] Niigata Univ Med & Dent Hosp, Uonuma Inst Community Med, Dept Orthoped Surg, Niigata, Japan
关键词
adolescent idiopathic scoliosis; conservative treatment; disability; disc degeneration; L3; tilt; L4; long-term follow-up; low back pain; lumbar curve; magnetic resonance imaging; natural course; quality of life; thoracolumbar curve; NATURAL-HISTORY; FOLLOW-UP; HEALTH; BRACE; DISC;
D O I
10.1097/BRS.0000000000002716
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Study Design. A retrospective, long-term follow-up study. Objective. We aimed to clarify the predicting factors at skeletal maturity for future curve progression and low back pain (LBP) in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) with thoracolumbar/lumbar (TL/L) curve. Summary of Background Data. TL/L curves are likely to progress after skeletal maturity and cause LBP. Methods. Of 147 patients treated nonoperatively for AIS with TL/L curve, 56 (55 females; average age at the time of survey, 39.5 +/- 7.1 years; average follow-up duration after maturity, 24.9 +/- 6.9 years) completed questionnaires, including the visual analogue scale (VAS) for LBP and Oswestry disability index (ODI). Forty-nine patients underwent a radiological examination, and 48 underwent lumbar magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Results. The mean Cobb angle of the TL/L curve increased from 37.3 degrees +/- 7.5 degrees to 47.8 degrees +/- 12.6 degrees (0.41 degrees +/- 0.39 degrees per year). The factors at skeletal maturity that were associated with the annual progression of the TL/L curve included a cranially located apical vertebra, and great apical vertebral translation and L3 tilt. In addition, the VAS for LBP was positively correlated with L4 tilt, and the ODI was positively correlated with L4 tilt and apical vertebral rotation. Multivariate analyses and receiver-operating characteristic curves demonstrated that L3 tilt at skeletal maturity independently predicted a curve progression >= 0.5 degrees per year (odds ratio [OR], 1.17), while L4 tilt at skeletal maturity independently predicted a VAS >= 3cm (OR, 1.20) and ODI >= 21% (OR, 1.25) in adulthood, with a cutoff value of approximately 16 degrees for each factor. Moreover, lumbar disc degeneration on MRI was associated with L4 tilt at skeletal maturity and LBP in adulthood. Conclusion. Great L3 and L4 tilt at skeletal maturity, especially those > 16 degrees, are predictors of future curve progression and LBP in adulthood, respectively. For adolescent patients with these risk factors, periodic follow-ups into adulthood should be considered.
引用
收藏
页码:E1403 / E1411
页数:9
相关论文
共 10 条
  • [1] Impact of the flexibility of the spinal deformity on low back pain and disc degeneration in adult patients nonoperatively treated for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis with thoracolumbar or lumbar curves
    Masayuki Ohashi
    Kei Watanabe
    Toru Hirano
    Kazuhiro Hasegawa
    Keiichi Katsumi
    Hideki Tashi
    Yohei Shibuya
    Hiroyuki Kawashima
    Spine Deformity, 2022, 10 : 133 - 140
  • [2] Impact of the flexibility of the spinal deformity on low back pain and disc degeneration in adult patients nonoperatively treated for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis with thoracolumbar or lumbar curves
    Ohashi, Masayuki
    Watanabe, Kei
    Hirano, Toru
    Hasegawa, Kazuhiro
    Katsumi, Keiichi
    Tashi, Hideki
    Shibuya, Yohei
    Kawashima, Hiroyuki
    SPINE DEFORMITY, 2022, 10 (01) : 133 - 140
  • [3] The Influence of Lumbar Muscle Volume on Curve Progression After Skeletal Maturity in Patients With Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis: A Long-Term Follow-up Study
    Watanabe K.
    Ohashi M.
    Hirano T.
    Katsumi K.
    Shoji H.
    Mizouchi T.
    Endo N.
    Hasegawa K.
    Spine Deformity, 2018, 6 (6) : 691 - 698.e1
  • [4] Health-Related Quality of Life in Nonoperated Patients With Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis in the Middle Years: A Mean 25-Year Follow-up Study
    Watanabe, Kei
    Ohashi, Masayuki
    Hirano, Toru
    Katsumi, Keiichi
    Mizouchi, Tatsuki
    Tashi, Hideki
    Minato, Keitaro
    Hasegawa, Kazuhiro
    Endo, Naoto
    SPINE, 2020, 45 (02) : E83 - E89
  • [5] Low Back Pain in Patients Treated Surgically for Scoliosis Longer Than Sixteen-Year Follow-up
    Takayama, Kazushi
    Nakamura, Hiroaki
    Matsuda, Hideki
    SPINE, 2009, 34 (20) : 2198 - 2204
  • [6] Curve progression in non-surgically treated patients with idiopathic scoliosis: a cohort study with 40-year follow-up
    Dragsted, Casper
    Ragborg, Laerke
    Ohrt-nissen, Soren
    Andersen, Thomas
    Gehrchen, Martin
    Dahl, Benny
    ACTA ORTHOPAEDICA, 2025, 96 : 110 - 115
  • [7] Long-Term Follow-up of Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis Patients Who Had Harrington Instrumentation and Fusion to the Lower Lumbar Vertebrae Is Low Back Pain a Problem?
    Bartie, Bruce J.
    Lonstein, John E.
    Winter, Robert B.
    SPINE, 2009, 34 (24) : E873 - E878
  • [8] Long-Term Follow-up of Posterior Selective Thoracolumbar/Lumbar Fusion in Patients With Lenke 5C Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis: An Analysis of 10-Year Outcomes
    Chen, Kai
    Chen, Yu
    Shao, Jie
    Zhoutian, Junke
    Wang, Fei
    Chen, Ziqiang
    Li, Ming
    GLOBAL SPINE JOURNAL, 2022, 12 (05) : 840 - 850
  • [9] Health-Related Quality of Life and Low Back Pain of Patients Surgically Treated for Scoliosis After 21 Years or More of Follow-up Comparison Among Nonidiopathic Scoliosis, Idiopathic Scoliosis, and Healthy Subjects
    Akazawa, Tsutomu
    Minami, Shohei
    Kotani, Toshiaki
    Nemoto, Tetsuharu
    Koshi, Takana
    Takahashi, Kazuhisa
    SPINE, 2012, 37 (22) : 1899 - 1903
  • [10] Correlations of changes in back and leg pain with changes in Oswestry Disability Index, SRS-22, and SF-12 in surgically treated patients with adult scoliosis: A retrospective review of a prospective multicenter database with 2-year follow-up
    Smith, Justin S.
    Shaffrey, Christopher I.
    Berven, Sigurd
    Glassman, Steven D.
    Hamill, Christopher
    Horton, William
    Ondra, Stephen L.
    Schwab, Frank
    Fu, Kai-Ming G.
    Shainline, Michael
    Bridwell, Keith
    NEUROSURGERY, 2008, 62 (06) : 1409 - 1409