Literature DB >> 18810026

Etiologic theories of idiopathic scoliosis. Somatic nervous system and the NOTOM escalator concept as one component in the pathogenesis of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis.

R G Burwell1, P H Dangerfield, B J C Freeman.   

Abstract

There is no generally accepted scientific theory for the causes of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS). In recent years encouraging advances thought to be related to the pathogenesis of AIS have been made in several fields. After reviewing concepts of AIS pathogenesis we formulated a collective model of pathogenesis. The central concept of this collective model is a normal neuro-osseous timing of maturation (NOTOM) system operating in a child's internal world during growth and maturation; this provides a dynamic physiological balance of postural equilibrium continuously renewed between two synchronous, polarized processes (NOTOM escalator) linked through sensory input and motor output, namely: 1) osseous escalator-increasing skeletal size and relative segmental mass, and 2) neural escalator - including the CNS body schema. The latter is recalibrated continuously as the body adjusts to biomechanical and kinematic changes resulting from skeletal enlargement, enabling it to coordinate motor actions. We suggest that AIS progression results from abnormality of the neural and/or osseous components of these normal escalator in time and/or space - as asynchrony and/or asymmetries - which cause a failure of neural systems to control asymmetric growth of a rapidly enlarging and moving adolescent spine. This putative initiating asymmetric growth in the spine is explained in separate papers as resulting from dysfunction of the hypothalamus expressed through the sympathetic nervous system (leptin-sympathetic nervous system concept for AIS pathogenesis). In girls, the expression of AIS may result from disharmony between the somatic and autonomic nervous systems - relative postural maturational delay in the somatic nervous system and hypothalamic dysfunction in the autonomic nervous system, with the conflict being fought out in the spine and trunk of the girl and compounded by biomechanical spinal growth modulation.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18810026

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stud Health Technol Inform        ISSN: 0926-9630


  6 in total

1.  Relatively lower body mass index is associated with an excess of severe truncal asymmetry in healthy adolescents: Do white adipose tissue, leptin, hypothalamus and sympathetic nervous system influence truncal growth asymmetry?

Authors:  Theodoros B Grivas; R Geoffrey Burwell; Constantinos Mihas; Elias S Vasiliadis; Georgios Triantafyllopoulos; Angelos Kaspiris
Journal:  Scoliosis       Date:  2009-06-30

2.  Pathogenesis of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis in girls - a double neuro-osseous theory involving disharmony between two nervous systems, somatic and autonomic expressed in the spine and trunk: possible dependency on sympathetic nervous system and hormones with implications for medical therapy.

Authors:  R Geoffrey Burwell; Ranjit K Aujla; Michael P Grevitt; Peter H Dangerfield; Alan Moulton; Tabitha L Randell; Susan I Anderson
Journal:  Scoliosis       Date:  2009-10-31

3.  Relationship Between Electromyographic Frequency of the Erector Spinae and Location, Direction, and Number of Spinal Curvatures in Children with Scoliotic Changes.

Authors:  Jacek Wilczyński; Przemysław Karolak
Journal:  Risk Manag Healthc Policy       Date:  2021-05-10

4.  "Rehabilitation schools for scoliosis" thematic series: describing the methods and results.

Authors:  Manuel D Rigo; Theodoros B Grivas
Journal:  Scoliosis       Date:  2010-12-24

5.  Understanding the role of the immune system in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis: Immunometabolic CONnections to Scoliosis (ICONS) study protocol.

Authors:  M Constantine Samaan; Paul Missiuna; Devin Peterson; Lehana Thabane
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2016-07-08       Impact factor: 2.692

6.  Investigation of the perceptual and cognitive asymmetry in the auditory system in patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis.

Authors:  Burçin Akçay; Gonca İnanç; Ata Elvan; Metin Selmani; Mehmet A Çakiroğlu; Ömer Akçali; İsmail S Satoğlu; Adile Oniz; İbrahim E Şimşek; Murat Ozgoren
Journal:  S Afr J Physiother       Date:  2021-09-29
  6 in total

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