Is There Increased Intervertebral Mobility in Isthmic Adult Spondylolisthesis?
- 1 July 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Spine
- Vol. 25 (13) , 1701-1703
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007632-200007010-00014
Abstract
By roentgen stereophotogrammetric technique, the intervertebral mobility of the spondylolytic segment in eight patients was measured and compared with the mobility of eight nonspondylolytic patients matched according to sex, afflicted segment, and grade of disc degeneration. To compare the intervertebral mobility of a spondylolytic segment with the mobility of a segment without spondylolysis in adult patients with back pain. Evidenced by the resulting olisthetic deformity and supported by the outcome from prior investigations, spondylolysis is assumed to induce spinal segmental instability/hypermobility. After percutaneous application of tantalum indicators for roentgen stereophotogrammetric technique, the intervertebral translations of the spondylolytic fifth lumbar vertebra were measured in eight adult patients with low back pain and low-grade olisthesis. Eight other patients without spondylolysis but with low back pain presumably on degenerative basis were chosen for comparison and had an identical measuring procedure using roentgen stereophotogrammetric technique. The two groups were matched in pairs according to sex, afflicted segment, and grade of disc degeneration. No significant difference was registered considering the intervertebral mobility for matched pairs in the two groups neither along the sagittal nor the vertical axis. The transverse translations were mostly negligible in both groups. The spondylolytic defect in pars interarticularis does not cause permanent instability/hypermobility detectable in the adult patient with low back pain and low-grade olisthesis.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Limited Usefulness of Traction-Compression Films in the Radiographic Diagnosis of Lumbar Spinal InstabilitySpine, 1997
- Mechanics of the External Fixation Test in the Lumbar SpineSpine, 1996
- The Prevalence of Disc Degeneration Associated with Neural Arch Defects of the Lumbar Spine Assessed by Magnetic Resonance ImagingSpine, 1989
- Lumbar Instability: A Dynamic Approach by Traction–Compression RadiographySpine, 1987
- Spontaneous Effect of Increased Stability of the Lower Lumbar Spine in Cases of Severe Chronic Back Pain The Answer of an External Transpeduncular Fixation TestPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1986
- Radiographic Measurement of the Lumbar SpineSpine, 1985
- Is There Instability in Spondylolisthesis?Spine, 1985
- Stabilization of the Lower Thoracic and Lumbar Spine with External Skeletal FixationClinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1984
- Instability of the Lumbar SpineClinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1982
- Pathology and Pathogenesis of Lumbar Spondylosis and StenosisSpine, 1978