Literature DB >> 19878575

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.

R Geoffrey Burwell1, Ranjit K Aujla, Michael P Grevitt, Peter H Dangerfield, Alan Moulton, Tabitha L Randell, Susan I Anderson.   

Abstract

Anthropometric data from three groups of adolescent girls - preoperative adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS), screened for scoliosis and normals were analysed by comparing skeletal data between higher and lower body mass index subsets. Unexpected findings for each of skeletal maturation, asymmetries and overgrowth are not explained by prevailing theories of AIS pathogenesis. A speculative pathogenetic theory for girls is formulated after surveying evidence including: (1) the thoracospinal concept for right thoracic AIS in girls; (2) the new neuroskeletal biology relating the sympathetic nervous system to bone formation/resorption and bone growth; (3) white adipose tissue storing triglycerides and the adiposity hormone leptin which functions as satiety hormone and sentinel of energy balance to the hypothalamus for long-term adiposity; and (4) central leptin resistance in obesity and possibly in healthy females. The new theory states that AIS in girls results from developmental disharmony expressed in spine and trunk between autonomic and somatic nervous systems. The autonomic component of this double neuro-osseous theory for AIS pathogenesis in girls involves selectively increased sensitivity of the hypothalamus to circulating leptin (genetically-determined up-regulation possibly involving inhibitory or sensitizing intracellular molecules, such as SOC3, PTP-1B and SH2B1 respectively), with asymmetry as an adverse response (hormesis); this asymmetry is routed bilaterally via the sympathetic nervous system to the growing axial skeleton where it may initiate the scoliosis deformity (leptin-hypothalamic-sympathetic nervous system concept = LHS concept). In some younger preoperative AIS girls, the hypothalamic up-regulation to circulating leptin also involves the somatotropic (growth hormone/IGF) axis which exaggerates the sympathetically-induced asymmetric skeletal effects and contributes to curve progression, a concept with therapeutic implications. In the somatic nervous system, dysfunction of a postural mechanism involving the CNS body schema fails to control, or may induce, the spinal deformity of AIS in girls (escalator concept). Biomechanical factors affecting ribs and/or vertebrae and spinal cord during growth may localize AIS to the thoracic spine and contribute to sagittal spinal shape alterations. The developmental disharmony in spine and trunk is compounded by any osteopenia, biomechanical spinal growth modulation, disc degeneration and platelet calmodulin dysfunction. Methods for testing the theory are outlined. Implications are discussed for neuroendocrine dysfunctions, osteopontin, sympathoactivation, medical therapy, Rett and Prader-Willi syndromes, infantile idiopathic scoliosis, and human evolution. AIS pathogenesis in girls is predicated on two putative normal mechanisms involved in trunk growth, each acquired in evolution and unique to humans.

Entities:  

Year:  2009        PMID: 19878575      PMCID: PMC2781798          DOI: 10.1186/1748-7161-4-24

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scoliosis        ISSN: 1748-7161


  323 in total

1.  Patterns of extra-spinal left-right skeletal asymmetries and proximo-distal disproportion in adolescent girls with lower spine scoliosis: ilio-femoral length asymmetry & bilateral tibial/foot length disproportion.

Authors:  R G Burwell; R K Aujla; B J C Freeman; P H Dangerfield; A A Cole; A S Kirby; R K Pratt; J K Webb; A Moulton
Journal:  Stud Health Technol Inform       Date:  2006

Review 2.  [Etiopathogenesis of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis and new molecular concepts].

Authors:  Kareen Letellier; Bouziane Azeddine; Sacha Blain; Isabelle Turgeon; Da Shen Wang; Mamadou Samba Boiro; Florina Moldovan; Hubert Labelle; Benoît Poitras; Charles-Hilaire Rivard; Guy Grimard; Stefan Parent; Jean Ouellet; Ginette Lacroix; Alain Moreau
Journal:  Med Sci (Paris)       Date:  2007-11       Impact factor: 0.818

Review 3.  Leptin and regulation of linear growth.

Authors:  Galia Gat-Yablonski; Moshe Phillip
Journal:  Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care       Date:  2008-05       Impact factor: 4.294

4.  Do estrogens impact adolescent idiopathic scoliosis?

Authors:  Dominique Leboeuf; Kareen Letellier; Nathalie Alos; Patrick Edery; Florina Moldovan
Journal:  Trends Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2009-04-06       Impact factor: 12.015

5.  Adolescents with idiopathic scoliosis are not osteoporotic.

Authors:  Elizabeth A Szalay; Patrick Bosch; Richard M Schwend; Brian Buggie; Dan Tandberg; Frederick Sherman
Journal:  Spine (Phila Pa 1976)       Date:  2008-04-01       Impact factor: 3.468

6.  Loss of hypothalamic response to leptin during pregnancy associated with development of melanocortin resistance.

Authors:  S R Ladyman; A Tups; R A Augustine; A Swahn-Azavedo; I C Kokay; D R Grattan
Journal:  J Neuroendocrinol       Date:  2009-05       Impact factor: 3.627

7.  A twin study for serum leptin, soluble leptin receptor, and free insulin-like growth factor-I in pubertal females.

Authors:  Hong-Juan Li; Cheng-Ye Ji; Wei Wang; Yong-Hua Hu
Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2005-03-22       Impact factor: 5.958

8.  Biomechanical spinal growth modulation and progressive adolescent scoliosis--a test of the 'vicious cycle' pathogenetic hypothesis: summary of an electronic focus group debate of the IBSE.

Authors:  Ian A F Stokes; R Geoffrey Burwell; Peter H Dangerfield
Journal:  Scoliosis       Date:  2006-10-18

9.  Relative shortening and functional tethering of spinal cord in adolescent scoliosis - Result of asynchronous neuro-osseous growth, summary of an electronic focus group debate of the IBSE.

Authors:  Winnie Cw Chu; Wynnie Mw Lam; Bobby Kw Ng; Lam Tze-Ping; Kwong-Man Lee; Xia Guo; Jack Cy Cheng; R Geoffrey Burwell; Peter H Dangerfield; Tim Jaspan
Journal:  Scoliosis       Date:  2008-06-27

10.  How does body fat influence bone mass in childhood? A Mendelian randomization approach.

Authors:  Nicholas J Timpson; Adrian Sayers; George Davey-Smith; Jonathan H Tobias
Journal:  J Bone Miner Res       Date:  2009-03       Impact factor: 6.741

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  32 in total

1.  The association of rs1149048 polymorphism in matrilin-1(MATN1) gene with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis susceptibility: a meta-analysis.

Authors:  Hongqi Zhang; Shushan Zhao; Zijin Zhao; Lanhua Tang; Qiang Guo; Shaohua Liu; Lizhang Chen
Journal:  Mol Biol Rep       Date:  2014-01-28       Impact factor: 2.316

Review 2.  Idiopathic scoliosis: etiological concepts and hypotheses.

Authors:  Romain Dayer; Thierry Haumont; Wilson Belaieff; Pierre Lascombes
Journal:  J Child Orthop       Date:  2013-01-29       Impact factor: 1.548

3.  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

4.  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

5.  Predictors of spine deformity progression in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis: A systematic review with meta-analysis.

Authors:  Andriy Noshchenko; Lilian Hoffecker; Emily M Lindley; Evalina L Burger; Christopher Mj Cain; Vikas V Patel; Andrew P Bradford
Journal:  World J Orthop       Date:  2015-08-18

6.  Genetic variants in GPR126 are associated with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis.

Authors:  Ikuyo Kou; Yohei Takahashi; Todd A Johnson; Atsushi Takahashi; Long Guo; Jin Dai; Xusheng Qiu; Swarkar Sharma; Aki Takimoto; Yoji Ogura; Hua Jiang; Huang Yan; Katsuki Kono; Noriaki Kawakami; Koki Uno; Manabu Ito; Shohei Minami; Haruhisa Yanagida; Hiroshi Taneichi; Naoya Hosono; Taichi Tsuji; Teppei Suzuki; Hideki Sudo; Toshiaki Kotani; Ikuho Yonezawa; Douglas Londono; Derek Gordon; John A Herring; Kota Watanabe; Kazuhiro Chiba; Naoyuki Kamatani; Qing Jiang; Yuji Hiraki; Michiaki Kubo; Yoshiaki Toyama; Tatsuhiko Tsunoda; Carol A Wise; Yong Qiu; Chisa Shukunami; Morio Matsumoto; Shiro Ikegawa
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2013-05-12       Impact factor: 38.330

Review 7.  Altered physiology of mesenchymal stem cells in the pathogenesis of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis.

Authors:  Dai Sik Ko; Yun Hak Kim; Tae Sik Goh; Jung Sub Lee
Journal:  World J Clin Cases       Date:  2020-06-06       Impact factor: 1.337

Review 8.  2016 SOSORT guidelines: orthopaedic and rehabilitation treatment of idiopathic scoliosis during growth.

Authors:  Stefano Negrini; Sabrina Donzelli; Angelo Gabriele Aulisa; Dariusz Czaprowski; Sanja Schreiber; Jean Claude de Mauroy; Helmut Diers; Theodoros B Grivas; Patrick Knott; Tomasz Kotwicki; Andrea Lebel; Cindy Marti; Toru Maruyama; Joe O'Brien; Nigel Price; Eric Parent; Manuel Rigo; Michele Romano; Luke Stikeleather; James Wynne; Fabio Zaina
Journal:  Scoliosis Spinal Disord       Date:  2018-01-10

9.  Whither the etiopathogenesis (and scoliogeny) of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis? Incorporating presentations on scoliogeny at the 2012 IRSSD and SRS meetings.

Authors:  R Geoffrey Burwell; Peter H Dangerfield; Alan Moulton; Theodoros B Grivas; Jack Cy Cheng
Journal:  Scoliosis       Date:  2013-02-28

10.  Alteration of cortical but not spinal inhibitory circuits in idiopathic scoliosis.

Authors:  Václav Boček; Martin Krbec; Peter Vaško; Karel Brabec; Markéta Pavlíková; Ivana Štětkářová
Journal:  J Spinal Cord Med       Date:  2020-03-23       Impact factor: 1.985

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