脊柱侧凸及后续手术对躯干形状的影响。

Q1 Medicine
Scoliosis and Spinal Disorders Pub Date : 2017-11-20 eCollection Date: 2017-01-01 DOI:10.1186/s13013-017-0140-0
Adrian Gardner, Fiona Berryman, Paul Pynsent
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引用次数: 14

摘要

背景:青少年特发性脊柱侧凸(AIS)引起躯干不对称,这通常是患者的主要关注点。手术的目的是尽量减少视觉不对称。目前尚不清楚脊柱侧凸是如何使躯干不对称的,也不清楚脊柱侧凸手术是如何改变这种不对称的,与正常对照非脊柱侧凸组的不对称分布相比。方法:对一组AIS患者进行术前和术后的表面形貌图像采集。通过比较图像之间的可识别点,通过观察二维冠状视图中肩部、腋窝和腰部中线的相对高度和距离,来识别AIS对躯干形状的影响。然后将其与先前报道的一组正常的非脊柱侧凸儿童进行比较,以分析手术是否能恢复正常。结果:172对图像,女性164对,男性8对,术前平均年龄13.7岁。正常组642张,其中女性237张,男性405张,男性116张,女性79张,平均年龄12.5岁。脊柱侧凸组的弯曲模式与主胸椎弯曲(n = 146)和主胸腰椎弯曲(n = 26)的模式相匹配。两种不同类型曲线的肩部、腋窝和腰部的不对称性有所不同。在两组中,肩部的不对称性都小于相应腋窝的不对称性。结论:本文定量地展示了AIS患者躯干不对称的范围以及手术改变不对称的程度。手术不能重建正常的躯干形状,但会导致统计上显著的躯干形状变化,与非脊柱侧凸组相比。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

The effects of scoliosis and subsequent surgery on the shape of the torso.

The effects of scoliosis and subsequent surgery on the shape of the torso.

The effects of scoliosis and subsequent surgery on the shape of the torso.

The effects of scoliosis and subsequent surgery on the shape of the torso.

Background: Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) causes asymmetry of the torso, and this is often the primary concern of patients. Surgery aims to minimise the visual asymmetry. It is not clear how scoliosis makes the torso asymmetric or how scoliosis surgery changes that asymmetry when compared to the distribution of asymmetries seen in a non-scoliotic group of normal controls.

Methods: Surface topography images were captured for a group with AIS both pre-operatively and post-operatively. Identifiable points were compared between the images to identify the effects of AIS on the shape of the torso by looking at the relative heights and distances from the midline of the shoulders, axillae and waist in a two-dimensional coronal view. This was then compared to a previously reported group of normal non-scoliotic children to analyse whether surgery recreated normality.

Results: There were 172 pairs of images with 164 females and 8 males, mean age at pre-operative scan of 13.7 years. The normal group was 642 images (237 females and 405 males) from 116 males and 79 females, mean age of 12.5 years.The curve patterns seen in the scoliotic group matched the patterns of a main thoracic curve (n = 146) and main thoracolumbar curve (n = 26). The asymmetries seen in both shoulders, axillae and waist were different between the two different types of curve. Across both groups, the shoulder asymmetry was less than that of the corresponding axillae.There was a statistically significant reduction in all asymmetries following surgery in the main thoracic group (p < 0.001). This was not seen in the main thoracolumbar group, thought to be due to the small sample size. In the main thoracic group, there were statistically significant differences in the asymmetries between the post-operative and normal groups in the shoulders and axillae (p < 0.001) but not the waist.

Conclusions: This paper demonstrates quantitatively the range of asymmetries seen in the AIS torso and the degree to which surgery alters them. Surgery does not recreate normality but does cause a statistically significant change in torso shape towards that seen in a non-scoliotic group.

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来源期刊
Scoliosis and Spinal Disorders
Scoliosis and Spinal Disorders Medicine-Orthopedics and Sports Medicine
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Cessation.Scoliosis and Spinal Disorders is an open access, multidisciplinary journal that encompasses all aspects of research on prevention, diagnosis, treatment, outcomes and cost-analyses of conservative and surgical management of all spinal deformities and disorders. Both clinical and basic science reports form the cornerstone of the journal in its endeavour to provide original, primary studies as well as narrative/systematic reviews and meta-analyses to the academic community and beyond. Scoliosis and Spinal Disorders aims to provide an integrated and balanced view of cutting-edge spine research to further enhance effective collaboration among clinical spine specialists and scientists, and to ultimately improve patient outcomes based on an evidence-based spine care approach.
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