Comparison of the Sagittal Spine Lordosis by Supine Computed Tomography and Upright Conventional Radiographs in Patients with Spinal Trauma

Study Design. Retrospective data analysis. Objective. To compare the sagittal lordosis of the lumbar spine by supine computed tomography (CT) and upright conventional radiographs. Summary of Background Data. There is sparse data about position and modality dependent changes of radiographic measureme...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Samy Bouaicha, Claudia Lamanna, Thorsten Jentzsch, Hans-Peter Simmen, Clément M. L. Werner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2014-01-01
Series:BioMed Research International
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/967178
id doaj-60e7f33115b74b389ed11ba1cf3f734d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-60e7f33115b74b389ed11ba1cf3f734d2020-11-24T21:29:16ZengHindawi LimitedBioMed Research International2314-61332314-61412014-01-01201410.1155/2014/967178967178Comparison of the Sagittal Spine Lordosis by Supine Computed Tomography and Upright Conventional Radiographs in Patients with Spinal TraumaSamy Bouaicha0Claudia Lamanna1Thorsten Jentzsch2Hans-Peter Simmen3Clément M. L. Werner4Division of Traumatology, University Hospital of Zurich, University of Zurich, Raemistraß 100, 8091 Zurich, SwitzerlandDivision of Traumatology, University Hospital of Zurich, University of Zurich, Raemistraß 100, 8091 Zurich, SwitzerlandDivision of Traumatology, University Hospital of Zurich, University of Zurich, Raemistraß 100, 8091 Zurich, SwitzerlandDivision of Traumatology, University Hospital of Zurich, University of Zurich, Raemistraß 100, 8091 Zurich, SwitzerlandDivision of Traumatology, University Hospital of Zurich, University of Zurich, Raemistraß 100, 8091 Zurich, SwitzerlandStudy Design. Retrospective data analysis. Objective. To compare the sagittal lordosis of the lumbar spine by supine computed tomography (CT) and upright conventional radiographs. Summary of Background Data. There is sparse data about position and modality dependent changes of radiographic measurements in the sagittal lumbar spine. Methods. The anatomical and functional Cobb angles of the thoracolumbar spine in 153 patients with spinal injury were measured by conventional upright sagittal radiographs and supine CT scans. Patients were assigned either to group A (n=101), with radiologically confirmed vertebral fractures, or to group B (n=52), without any osseous lesions. The interchangeability of the two imaging modalities was calculated using a ±3° and 5° range of acceptance. Results. Group A showed a mean intraindividual difference of −3.8° for both the anatomical and the functional Cobb angle. Only 25.7% and 27.7% of the 101 patients showed a difference within the tolerated ±3° margin. Using the ±5° limits, only 46 and 47 individuals fell within the acceptable range, respectively. In the patients in group B, the mean intraindividual difference was −2.1° for the anatomical and −1.5° for the functional Cobb angle. Of the 52 patients, only 14 and 13 patients, respectively demonstrated an intraindividual difference within ±3°. With regard to a threshold of ±5°, both the functional and anatomical values were within the defined margins in only 25 (48%) patients. Conclusion. The use of supine CT measurements as a baseline assessment of the sagittal lordosis of the injured thoracolumbar spine does not appear to be appropriate when upright conventional sagittal plane radiographs are used for follow-up measurements.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/967178
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Samy Bouaicha
Claudia Lamanna
Thorsten Jentzsch
Hans-Peter Simmen
Clément M. L. Werner
spellingShingle Samy Bouaicha
Claudia Lamanna
Thorsten Jentzsch
Hans-Peter Simmen
Clément M. L. Werner
Comparison of the Sagittal Spine Lordosis by Supine Computed Tomography and Upright Conventional Radiographs in Patients with Spinal Trauma
BioMed Research International
author_facet Samy Bouaicha
Claudia Lamanna
Thorsten Jentzsch
Hans-Peter Simmen
Clément M. L. Werner
author_sort Samy Bouaicha
title Comparison of the Sagittal Spine Lordosis by Supine Computed Tomography and Upright Conventional Radiographs in Patients with Spinal Trauma
title_short Comparison of the Sagittal Spine Lordosis by Supine Computed Tomography and Upright Conventional Radiographs in Patients with Spinal Trauma
title_full Comparison of the Sagittal Spine Lordosis by Supine Computed Tomography and Upright Conventional Radiographs in Patients with Spinal Trauma
title_fullStr Comparison of the Sagittal Spine Lordosis by Supine Computed Tomography and Upright Conventional Radiographs in Patients with Spinal Trauma
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of the Sagittal Spine Lordosis by Supine Computed Tomography and Upright Conventional Radiographs in Patients with Spinal Trauma
title_sort comparison of the sagittal spine lordosis by supine computed tomography and upright conventional radiographs in patients with spinal trauma
publisher Hindawi Limited
series BioMed Research International
issn 2314-6133
2314-6141
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Study Design. Retrospective data analysis. Objective. To compare the sagittal lordosis of the lumbar spine by supine computed tomography (CT) and upright conventional radiographs. Summary of Background Data. There is sparse data about position and modality dependent changes of radiographic measurements in the sagittal lumbar spine. Methods. The anatomical and functional Cobb angles of the thoracolumbar spine in 153 patients with spinal injury were measured by conventional upright sagittal radiographs and supine CT scans. Patients were assigned either to group A (n=101), with radiologically confirmed vertebral fractures, or to group B (n=52), without any osseous lesions. The interchangeability of the two imaging modalities was calculated using a ±3° and 5° range of acceptance. Results. Group A showed a mean intraindividual difference of −3.8° for both the anatomical and the functional Cobb angle. Only 25.7% and 27.7% of the 101 patients showed a difference within the tolerated ±3° margin. Using the ±5° limits, only 46 and 47 individuals fell within the acceptable range, respectively. In the patients in group B, the mean intraindividual difference was −2.1° for the anatomical and −1.5° for the functional Cobb angle. Of the 52 patients, only 14 and 13 patients, respectively demonstrated an intraindividual difference within ±3°. With regard to a threshold of ±5°, both the functional and anatomical values were within the defined margins in only 25 (48%) patients. Conclusion. The use of supine CT measurements as a baseline assessment of the sagittal lordosis of the injured thoracolumbar spine does not appear to be appropriate when upright conventional sagittal plane radiographs are used for follow-up measurements.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/967178
work_keys_str_mv AT samybouaicha comparisonofthesagittalspinelordosisbysupinecomputedtomographyanduprightconventionalradiographsinpatientswithspinaltrauma
AT claudialamanna comparisonofthesagittalspinelordosisbysupinecomputedtomographyanduprightconventionalradiographsinpatientswithspinaltrauma
AT thorstenjentzsch comparisonofthesagittalspinelordosisbysupinecomputedtomographyanduprightconventionalradiographsinpatientswithspinaltrauma
AT hanspetersimmen comparisonofthesagittalspinelordosisbysupinecomputedtomographyanduprightconventionalradiographsinpatientswithspinaltrauma
AT clementmlwerner comparisonofthesagittalspinelordosisbysupinecomputedtomographyanduprightconventionalradiographsinpatientswithspinaltrauma
_version_ 1725966476391743488