| Literature DB >> 31463681 |
Brandon Michael Henry1,2, Przemysław A Pękala1,2, Paulina A Frączek3,4, Jakub R Pękala1,2, Konstantinos Natsis5, Maria Piagkou6, Krzysztof A Tomaszewski1,7, Iwona M Tomaszewska8.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The purpose of the study was to analyze the total prevalence, morphologic, and morphometric characteristics of the pterygospinous (PS) bar and its gender and ethnic differences among populations. PS bar is an ossified anatomic structure stretching between the posterior margin of the lateral pterygoid lamina to the angular spine of the undersurface of the sphenoid, with potential clinical implications. There is no consensus in the literature on its prevalence, morphologic, and morphometric characteristics.Entities:
Keywords: Civinini’s foramen; Ossified ligament; Pterygospinous bar; Pterygospinous foramen
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31463681 PMCID: PMC7096365 DOI: 10.1007/s00276-019-02305-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surg Radiol Anat ISSN: 0930-1038 Impact factor: 1.246
Fig. 1Lateral view of the dry skulls (a, b), and CT scan (c) with presentation of the a, c complete, and b incomplete pterygospinous bar (both marked with white arrows); ANT anterior, POST posterior
Fig. 2Lateral view (a) and inferior view (b–d) of the dry skulls with bilateral (a, b) and unilateral (c, d) complete pterygospinous bar left-sided presentation (all marked with black arrows); ANT anterior, POST posterior
Fig. 3Inferior view of the base of the dry skulls with unilateral incomplete pterygospinous bar presenting on the left side (b, c) and right side (a) (all marked with black arrows); ANT anterior, POST posterior
Fig. 4Inferior view of the base of the dry skull with a right-sided complete pterygoalar bar (marked with black arrow) medial to foramen ovale (marked with white arrow); ANT anterior, POST posterior
Fig. 5Flowchart of studies through the meta-analysis
Characteristics of included studies with their prevalence of the pterygospinous (PS) bar (complete and incomplete)
| Author(s) | Year | Population | Study | Subjects | % Prevalence of complete PS bar (number of complete PS bar) | % Prevalence of incomplete PS bar (number of incomplete PS bar) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Macalister [ | 1875 | Irish | C | 144 | 9.7 (14) | 0 (0) |
| Roth [ | 1882 | Germans | C | 326 | 7.4 (24) | 16.0 (52) |
| von Brunn [ | 1891 | Germans | C | 406 | 5.2 (21) | 18.5 75) |
| Grosse [ | 1893 | Germans | C | 400 600 | 3.0 (12) 2.3 (14) | 20.0 (80) 10.0 (60) |
| LeDouble [ | 1903 | French | C | 1535 | 4.4 (67) | No data |
| Oetteking [ | 1930 | Americans | C | 467 | 6.2 (29) | 33.0 (151) |
| Chouke [ | 1946 1947 | Americans | C | 1544 | 6.25 (97) | 0 (0) |
| 2745 | 4.7 (128) | 23.1 (633) | ||||
| Priman and Etter [ | 1959 | Americans | C | 250 | 3.2 (8) | 8.0 (20) |
| Tebo [ | 1968 | Indians | C | 516 | 3.9 (20) | 32.9 (170) |
| Dodo [ | 1974 | Japanese | C | 329 | 5.5 (18) | 0 (0) |
| Dodo and Ishida [ | 1987 | Japanese | 1160 | 6.6 (77) | No data | |
| Shaw [ | 1993 | Indians | C | 454 | 4.4 (20) | 11.7 (53) |
| Krmpotic-Nemanic et al. [ | 1999 | Croatians | C | 120 | 4.2 (5) | 0 (0) |
| Kapur et al. [ | 2000 | Bosnians and Herzegovinians | C | 305 | 3.6 (11) | 14.8 (45) |
| Saiki [ | 2000 | Japanese | C | 91 | 4.4 (4) | No data |
| Ludinghausen et al. [ | 2006 | Japanese | C | 100 | 6.0 (6) | 11.0 (11) |
| Das and Paul [ | 2007 | Indians | C | 50 | 0 (0) | 2.0 (1) |
| Nayak et al. [ | 2007 | Indians (Dravidian) | C | 416 | 5.8 (24) | 3.8 (16) |
| Antonopolou et al. [ | 2008 | Greeks | C | 50 | 16.0 (8) | 22.0 (11) |
| Tubbs et al. [ | 2009 | Americans | C | 152 | 0.7 (1) | 0.7 (1) |
| Suazo et al. [ | 2010 | Brazilians | C | 312 | 1.6 (5) | 13.1 (41) |
| Rosa et al. [ | 2010 | Brazilians | XR | 93 | 8.6 (8) | 19.4 (18) |
| Sharma and Garud [ | 2011 | Indians | C | 50 | 2.0 (1) | 0 (0) |
| Shinde et al. [ | 2011 | Indians (Karnataka) | C | 65 | 0 (0) | 3.1 (2) |
| Devi Jansirani et al. [ | 2012 | Indians | C | 204 | 1.0 (2) | 10.8 (22) |
| Chakravarthi et al. [ | 2013 | Indians (Karnataka) | C | 100 | 3.0 (3) | 1.0 (1) |
| Saran et al. [ | 2013 | Indians (Chennai) | C | 80 | 2.5 (2) | 11.3 (9) |
| Verma et al. [ | 2013 | Indians (UP) | C | 116 | 12.9 (15) | 1.7 (2) |
| Kavitha et al. [ | 2014 | Indians | C | 100 | 1.0 (1) | 16.0 (16) |
| Yadav et al. [ | 2014 | Indians (UP) | C | 50 500 | 4.0 (2) 4.0 (20) | 10.0 (5) 6.2 (31) |
| Goyal and Jain [ | 2016 | Indians (Punjab) | C | 75 | 2.7 (2) | 14.7 (11) |
| Ryu et al. [ | 2016 | South Koreans | C | 142 | 2.1 (3) | 24.6 (35) |
C Cadaveric, XR radiograph
Fig. 6Forest plots for the population pooled prevalence of the complete and incomplete pterygospinous (PS) bar
Geographical subgroups, gender, and sensitivity analysis for complete pterygospinous (PS) bars. Sensitivity analyses were conducted on studies with more than 500 patients
| Subgroup | Number of studies (number of subjects) | Pooled prevalence of complete PS bar: % (95% CI) | Cochran’s | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall studies | 35 (14,047) | 4.4 (3.7–5.1) | 69.34 (56.69–78.30) | |
| Cadaveric studies | 34 (13,954) | 4.3 (3.6–5.0) | 69.44 (56.62–78.47) | |
| Sensitivity | 7 (8600) | 4.6 (3.7–5.5) | 72.93 (41.74–87.42) | 0.001 |
| North Americans | 5 (5158) | 4.4 (3.2–5.8) | 73.16 (32.89–89.26) | 0.005 |
| Asians | 18 (4144) | 3.7 (2.6–5.0) | 71.33 (53.85–82.19) | |
| Europeans | 10 (4340) | 4.9 (3.7–6.4) | 71.65 (46.11–85.09) | |
| South Americans | 2 (405) | 4.5 (0.0–12.9) | 88.33 (55.37–96.95) | 0.003 |
| Brazilians | 2 (405) | 4.5 (0.0–12.9) | 88.33 (55.37–96.95) | 0.003 |
| Germans | 4 (1732) | 4.2 (2.3–6.6) | 79.88 (46.68–92.41) | 0.002 |
| Indians | 13 (2322) | 3.0 (1.7–4.6) | 71.11 (49.24–83.56) | |
| Japanese | 4 (1680) | 6.3 (5.2–7.5) | 0.0 (0.0–49.20) | 0.8240 |
| Americans | 5 (5158) | 4.4 (3.2–5.8) | 73.16 (32.89–89.26) | 0.005 |
| Males | 4 (3771) | 5.7 (4.9–6.4) | 0.38 (0.00–84.75) | 0.390 |
| Females | 4 (1076) | 2.4 (1.5–3.6) | 14.47 (0.00–86.90) | 0.320 |
Analysis of laterality of the pterygospinous (PS) bar
| Number of studies (subjects with PS bar) | Unilateral complete % (95% CI) | Unilateral incomplete % (95% CI) | Bilateral complete % (95% CI) | Bilateral incomplete % (95% CI) | Mixeda: % (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 23 (1438) | 23.7 (10.0–36.2) | 45.3 (26.4–57.4) | 8.0 (0.8–18.0) | 19.3 (7.0–31.4) | 3.7 (0.0–10.2) | 95.4 (94.1–96.4) |
aMixed type—both a complete PS on one side and an incomplete PS on the other
bCochran’s Q, p value for all groups < 0.001
Prevalence of complete and incomplete pterygospinous (PS) ligaments with respect to side of occurrence
| Subgroup | Number of studies (subjects with PS bar) | Right-sided PS: % (95% CI) | Left-sided PS: % (95% CI) | Cochran’s | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Complete PS | 20 (407) | 46.9 (39.9–54.0) | 53.1 (46.0–60.1) | 24.95 (0.00–56.47) | 0.150 |
| Incomplete PS | 18 (1238) | 49.2 (45.8–52.6) | 50.8 (47.4–54.2) | 4.96 (0.00–52.45) | 0.396 |
Geographical subgroups, gender, and sensitivity analysis for incomplete ossified pterygospinous (PS) bars
| Subgroup | Number of studies (number of subjects) | Pooled prevalence of incomplete PS bar % (95% CI) | Cochran’s | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall studies | 28 (9124) | 11.6 (8.5–15.2) | 95.55 (94.45–96.43) | |
| Cadaveric studies | 27 (9031) | 11.4 (8.2–15.0) | 95.71 (94.64–96.57) | |
| Sensitivity | 4 (4361) | 16.2 (7.0–28.0) | 98.47 (97.57–99.04) | |
| North Americans | 4 (3614) | 12.6 (3.3–25.8) | 98.12 (96.90–98.86) | |
| Asians | 15 (2564) | 8.4 (3.9–14.3) | 95.09 (93.27–96.42) | |
| Europeans | 7 (2541) | 15.4 (12.2–18.8) | 80.27 (59.89–90.30) | |
| South Americans | 2 (405) | 15.3 (9.8–21.8) | 54.02 (0.00–88.69) | 0.140 |
| Brazilians | 2 (405) | 15.3 (9.8–21.8) | 54.02 (0.00–88.69) | 0.140 |
| Germans | 4 (1732) | 15.7 (11.1–21.0) | 87.75 (70.94–94.84) | |
| Indians | 13 (2322) | 7.0 (2.6–13.2) | 95.48 (93.69–96.76) | |
| Americans | 4 (3614) | 12.6 (3.3–25.8) | 98.12 (96.90–98.86) | |
| Males | 2 (2385) | 20.7 (14.4–27.9) | 78.22 (5.16–95.00) | 0.032 |
| Females | 2 (589) | 16.2 (9.7–23.9) | 75.67 (0.00–94.48) | 0.043 |
Morphometric analysis of the pterygospinous (PS) bar
| Diameters of PS structures | Number of cadaveric studies (number of PS) | Pooled mean distance: mm (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Foramen | |||
| Horizontal | 2 (89) | 9.05 (5.99–12.11) | 0.0 |
| Vertical | 4 (137) | 5.75 (3.97–7.53) | 0.0 |
| Bar | |||
| Length | 3 (75) | 7.48 (4.69–10.28) | 0.0 |
| Width | 3 (75) | 3.06 (2.38–3.74) | 0.0 |