| Literature DB >> 30069082 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Several attempts (radiographic and nonradiographic) have been made to measure the lumbar lordosis (LL), but the results differ substantially as investigators have used different parameters. Radiography is the gold standard, and the methods include lumbosacral angle (LSA), lumbosacral joint angle (LSJA), Cobb angle, and tangential radiologic assessment of LL (TRALL) angle. The traditional method, the Cobb technique, has a wide range of normal mean values, with a large standard deviation. Using a more reliable radiographic angle will hopefully simply and standardize LL measurement in the diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up of patients. AIM: To compare in normal individuals with fully developed LL the LSA, LSJA, TRALL, and Cobb angles, by determining (a) if any correlation exists between them and (b) the most reliable measures of LL, based on, least (i) number of measurement lines, (ii) range of values, (iii) mean, (iv) standard deviation, and (v) variance.Entities:
Keywords: Comparison; correlation; lumbar lordosis; methods; radiography; reliability
Year: 2018 PMID: 30069082 PMCID: PMC6050761 DOI: 10.4103/jnrp.jnrp_508_17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci Rural Pract ISSN: 0976-3155
Figure 1Normal lateral lumbosacral spine radiograph
Figure 2Lumbosacral angle, lumbosacral joint angle, Cobb, and tangential radiologic assessment of lumbar lordosis angles measurement lines in a normal lateral lumbosacral spine radiograph
Age variation by gender, and t-tests between genders
Lumbar lordotic angles variation by gender, and t-tests between genders
T-test of current mean lumbar lordotic angles with some corresponding literature values
Paired samples correlations of the male-versus-female lumbar lordotic angles
Totals mean lumbar lordotic angles correlations (i.e., bivariate correlation analysis with two-tailed test of significance)
Summary of assessment criteria for reliability of lumbar lordotic angles