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Journal ArticleDOI

Degenerative Symptomatic Lumbar Scoliosis

James W. Pritchett, +1 more
- 01 May 1993 - 
- Vol. 18, Iss: 6, pp 700-703
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TLDR
The authors studied 200 patients older than ago 50 years with back pain and recent onset of secolicsis and found that a Cobb angle of 30 or more, lateral vertebral translation of 6 mmor more, and the prominence of L5 in relation to the intercrest line were important factors in predicting curve progression.
Abstract
Scoliosis with progressive deformity can develop late in life. The authors studied 200 patients older than age 50 years with back pain and recent onset of scoliosis. Seventy-one percent of patients were women, and no patient had undergone spinal surgery. The curves involved the area from T12 to L5 with the apex at L2 or L3 and did not exceed 60 degrees. Degenerative facet joint and disc disease always were present, and the curves were associated with a loss of lumbar lordosis. Forty-five patients with severe pain and neurologic deficits were studied using myelography. Indention of the column of contrast medium was seen at several levels but was most severe at the apex of the curve. It was least severe at the lumbosacral joint. The curves progressed an average of 3 degrees per year over a 5-year period in 73% of patients. Grade 3 apical rotation, a Cobb angle of 30 or more, lateral vertebral translation of 6 mm or more, and the prominence of L5 in relation to the intercrest line were important factors in predicting curve progression.

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The Impact of Positive Sagittal Balance in Adult Spinal Deformity

TL;DR: This study shows that although even mildly positive sagittal balance is somewhat detrimental, severity of symptoms increases in a linear fashion with progressive sagittal imbalance, and shows that kyphosis is more favorable in the upper thoracic region but very poorly tolerated in the lumbar spine.
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Minimally invasive multilevel percutaneous correction and fusion for adult lumbar degenerative scoliosis: a technique and feasibility study.

TL;DR: A combination of 3 MIS techniques allows for correction of lumbar degenerative scoliosis with less blood loss and morbidity than for open correction.
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Adult degenerative scoliosis: evaluation and management.

TL;DR: A suitable approach to help guide surgical treatment, including decompression, instrumented posterior spinal fusion, anterior spinal Fusion, and osteotomy is discussed, based on clinical analysis, radiographic analysis of the mechanical stability of the deformity, given pain generators, and necessary sagittal balance.
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Improvement of back pain with operative and nonoperative treatment in adults with scoliosis.

TL;DR: S surgically treated patients had significantly less back pain and disability and improved health status compared with nonoperatively treated patients at the time of the 2-year follow-up evaluation, suggesting surgery can offer significant improvement of back pain for adults with scoliosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Degenerative lumbar scoliosis associated with spinal stenosis.

TL;DR: An algorithm for operative treatment corresponding to a newly proposed classification system of degenerative lumbar scoliosis with associated canal stenosis is presented to provide pain relief and improved functional lifestyle with minimum intervention.
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