• Spine · Jan 2003

    Pelvic lordosis and alignment in spondylolisthesis.

    • Roger P Jackson, Timothy Phipps, Chris Hales, and Jim Surber.
    • Spine Surgery Service, North Kansas City Hospital, North Kansas City, Missouri, USA. rogerjackson@attglobal.net
    • Spine. 2003 Jan 15; 28 (2): 151-60.

    Study Design And ObjectivesPelvic morphology and lumbopelvic lordosis were measured on standing radiographs of 75 patients with greater than 10% L5-S1 spondylolytic spondylolisthesis. The findings were compared with those of 75 volunteers to determine significant differences between the two groups.Summary Of Background DataEtiology of isthmic (lytic) spondylolisthesis remains uncertain. Causation appears to be multifactorial. The relationship between pelvic morphology and spondylolisthesis deserves additional study.MethodsBoth groups had a standing lateral radiograph of the thoracolumbar spine and pelvis taken that included both hips. Three radiographic angles for pelvic morphology (pelvisacral, pelvic incidence, and pelvic lordosis) were measured by two observers. Each offered similar reliability. Measurement of the pelvic lordosis angle by the pelvic radius technique required fewer steps. It also allowed calculation of the combined angles comprising both the pelvic morphology component for lordosis (the constant pelvic lordosis angle) and the lordosis in the lumbar spine (the variable lumbar lordosis from T12-S1) that should complement the fixed pelvic lordosis (the complementary lumbopelvic lordosis). Mean values and statistical correlations were then computed for each group and compared.ResultsThe mean slippage for patients was 30% (range, 11-85%), with 34 patients (45%) having Grade I slips, 32 (43%) having Grade II slips, and nine (12%) having Grade III and IV slips. The mean measurements between patients and volunteers were significantly different (P < 0.01) for lumbar lordosis, pelvic lordosis, and lumbopelvic lordosis. Subgroups of patients with increasingly larger slips (Grade I-III) had significantly smaller mean angles for pelvic lordosis.ConclusionsThe pelvic and lumbopelvic parameters studied were different in patients compared with controls. The contribution of the pelvis to lordosis was significantly smaller in the subgroups of patients with increasingly larger grades of spondylolisthesis. Pelvic morphology may play a role in the development of spondylolisthesis. Measurement of the combined lumbar and pelvic (lumbopelvic) lordosis on standing radiographs is important.

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