| Literature DB >> 35256699 |
Masaki Tatsumura1, Hisanori Gamada2, Shun Okuwaki2, Fumihiko Eto3, Katsuya Nagashima3, Takeo Mammoto3, Atsushi Hirano3, Toru Funayama2, Masashi Yamazaki2.
Abstract
Occasionally lumbar spondylolysis in adolescents will recur after conservative treatment. The goal of this study was to retrospectively review the conditions in which recurrence transpired in a subset of adolescent patients diagnosed with acute lumbar spondylolysis. A retrospective survey was conducted in 141 patients who had been treated for spondylolysis and had obtained bone union. Twenty subjects were selected who had recurrent lumbar spondylolysis after returning to sports activity following the initial spondylolysis treatment. There were 18 males and two females with an average age at the time of initial visit of 13.3 years and 14.1 years at the time of recurrence. The average period of initial treatment was 101 days, and the average time to recurrence after healing was 149 days. There were three cases at L3, two cases at L4 and 15 cases at L5. At recurrence, 18 patients had unilateral involvement and two patients presented with bilateral occurrence. Four cases did not achieve bony union. In this study, the recurrence rate was 13.2%. Eighty percent of cases had recurrence within six months after healing. After recurrence, 20% of the cases reached pseudoarthrosis. It is useful to take regular MRI images to detect recurrence within six months after returning to sports.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35256699 PMCID: PMC8901666 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-07884-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Patient demographics.
| Recurrent group | Non-recurrent group | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Number | Patients | 20 | 121 |
| Lesions | 22 | 171 | |
| Age at the first visit (years old) | 13.3 | 14.6(※) | |
| Age at the reccurence (years old) | 14.1 | ||
| Treatment period at the first visit(days) | 101 | 104 | |
| Treatment period at the reccurence(days) | 100 | ||
| Vertebral level | L3 (lesions) | 4 | 21 |
| L4 (lesions) | 2 | 58 | |
| L5 (lesions) | 16 | 101 | |
| Laterality at the first visit | Unilateral (persons) | 15 | 69 |
| Bilateral (persons) | 5 | 52 | |
| Laterality at the reccurence | Unilateral (persons) | 18 | |
| Bilateral (persons) | 2 | ||
| Spina bifida occulta (persons) | 15 | 59 | |
| Pathological stage at the first visit | Pre-lysis (lesions) | 8 | 51 |
| Early (lesions) | 14 | 96 | |
| Progressive (lesions) | 3 | 24 | |
| Pathological stage at the recurrence | Pre-lysis (lesions) | 6 | |
| Early (lesions) | 14 | ||
| Progressive(lesions) | 2 | ||
| Sport discipline | Baseball or softball (persons) | 5 | 41 |
| Soccer (persons) | 4 | 35 | |
| Volleyball (persons) | 2 | 13 | |
| Track and field (persons) | 2 | 6 | |
| Swimming (persons) | 2 | 2 | |
| Others (persons) | 5 | 24 | |
| (※): | |||
The number, age, treatment period, vertebral level of the lesion, laterality, spina bifida occulta, pathological stage, and sport discipline of recurrent group and non- recurrent group.
Figure 1The short tau inversion recovery magnetic resonance images (STIR-MRI) at the first examination showed high intensity change bilaterally (white arrows) in the pedicles of L5 (a). CT revealed bilateral faint fracture lines (white arrows) on the axial slice (b) and slight bone resorption (white arrows) on the ventral side of the lamina in the sagittal view (c, d).
Figure 2Nineteen weeks after the first examination, the intensity change on MRI disappeared (a). The fracture lines disappeared on the axial CT slice (b) and there was no obvious worsening of the resorption in the sagittal view (c, d).
Figure 3Twelve weeks after the first healing, short tau inversion recovery magnetic resonance images (STIR-MRI) showed high intensity change (white arrow) on only the left side (a). CT revealed no fracture line (white arrow) in the axial view (b) but slight bone resorption (white arrow) on the ventral side in the sagittal view (c).
Figure 4Ten weeks after the second conservative treatment, the intensity change on MRI disappeared (a). No abnormality was detected from the axial or sagittal CT slices (b, c).