The spine journal : official journal of the North American Spine Society
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In adolescents with idiopathic scoliosis (AIS), several studies have shown that the pelvis is structurally changed by the spinal disorder. In fact, a significant correlation has been observed between the three-dimensional changes in the lumbar curve and the reduction in pelvic displacement in the three spatial planes during gait. However, the impact of this pelvic disorder on the walking mechanism has not been established. ⋯ The scoliosis affected the structural bones of the pelvis with no effect on the 3D pelvis position during standing. During walking, normal 3D pelvic displacements could be explained by the prolonged duration of activation of the erector spinae and quadratum lumborum muscles bilaterally allowing the equilibrium of the pelvis to be maintained. This excessive muscular activity caused a failure of the locomotor mechanism as shown by an increase in the muscular external work.
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Previous reports have shown that 15% of patients who undergo sequential anterior, then posterior, surgical corrections for spinal deformities demonstrate evidence of acute lung injury. By analyzing the bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid from these patients for evidence of acute inflammation, we might gain some insight into the etiology of this acute lung injury. ⋯ After A/P spine fusions, patients have evidence of an acute inflammatory pulmonary injury. Several etiologies exist for this finding, including blood and fluid infusions, direct trauma to the lung, a systemic inflammatory response, and the embolization of fat and bone-marrow debris. The presence of LLMAC in the lungs of these patients and the finding that the patient with the requirement for the longest ventilatory support also had the highest BAL LLMAC count, suggest that the embolization of fat and bone debris released from the spine during surgery may be at least partially responsible for the lung injury. Further studies on the mechanism of lung injury during this procedure are warranted.
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Intradiscal electrothermal annuloplasty (IDET) is a minimally invasive procedure for managing chronic discogenic low back pain (LBP). Although there have been numerous reports of IDET outcome rates, few have dissected the detailed factors affecting those outcomes. ⋯ Higher temperatures and larger total heating doses during IDET procedures with catheters placed in the outer annulus may increase the duration of post-procedure pain flare-ups and lead to less favorable outcomes at 8 months follow-up. The long-term outcomes at 16 months may, however, not be affected by these heating variables.
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Sagittal profiles of the spine have been hypothesized to influence spinal coupling and loads on spinal tissues. ⋯ The analyses suggest that sagittal spine balance and curvature are important parameters for postural load balance in healthy male and female subjects. Morphological predictors of altered disc load outcomes were sagittal balance parameters in the thoracic spine and anatomic angles in the lumbar spine.