Literature DB >> 779736

[Scoliosis, metabolism and growth of the vertebral column (author's transl)].

H Neugebauer.   

Abstract

Modern investigators incline to the opinion, that more biochemical than biomechanical disorders take part in cause of the "idiopathic'' scolioses. It seems, however, that there is not only one cause but more in some subgroups. Idiopathic scolioses, which have symptomes of arachnodactyly, seem to be a big one of these subgroups. These cases allow to state a hypothesis, in which kind a disordered metabolism leads to a deviation of the spine. This hypothesis is basing on the fact, that the enchondral growth in the length and the periostal growth in the width of "long bones'' are not regulated in the same endocrinological kind and that the enchondral growth of the vertebral-bodies-column happens in cranio-caudal direction, the enchondral growth of the vertebral-archies-column, however, in anterior-posterior direction. If the balance between enchondral and periostal growth is disturbed, you can see typical chances on the long bones, which resemble either an "arachnodactyly" or a "chondrodysplasy". The same disturbance will cause a "kyphosis" respectively a "lordosis" (or scoliosis) on the vertebral spine; either the bodies-column or the archies-column will become longer (higher). The results of metabolism research are suitable to these facts. If the balance between enchondral and periostal growth,--basing on a dysbolism,--is disturbed in such a kind, that the vertebral-bodies-column is growing faster than the vertebral-archies-column, the vertebral spine is forced to change into a lordosis respectively into a scoliosis. If you want to cure an idiopathic scoliosis, you first have to remove or to paralyse the dysbolism. The aim of all research has to be to find an effective chemotherapeutical treatment of mindst a part of all idiopathic scolioses.

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Year:  1976        PMID: 779736     DOI: 10.1007/bf00416336

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Orthop Unfallchir        ISSN: 0003-9330


  13 in total

1.  [JUVENILE KYPHOSIS. SO-CALLED SCHEUERMANN'S DISEASES].

Authors:  F W RATHKE
Journal:  Dtsch Med Wochenschr       Date:  1965-03-19       Impact factor: 0.628

2.  [BIOCHEMICAL PROCESSES IN CONNECTION WITH PROGRESSIVE SCOLIOSIS].

Authors:  R KYSELKA
Journal:  Beitr Orthop Traumatol       Date:  1965-03

3.  Treatment of scoliosis. Correction and internal fixation by spine instrumentation.

Authors:  P R HARRINGTON
Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am       Date:  1962-06       Impact factor: 5.284

4.  The incidence of scoliosis in the state of Delaware; a study of 50,000 minifilms of the chest made during a survey for tuberculosis.

Authors:  A R SHANDS; H B EISBERG
Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am       Date:  1955-12       Impact factor: 5.284

5.  A follow-up study of the treatment of scoliosis.

Authors:  J C RISSER; D M NORQUIST
Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am       Date:  1958-06       Impact factor: 5.284

6.  Rotational lordosis; the development of single curve.

Authors:  E W SOMERVILLE
Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Br       Date:  1952-08

7.  [Marfan's syndrome associated with Addison's disease and acromegaly].

Authors:  H Schindler
Journal:  Wien Med Wochenschr       Date:  1975-11-07

8.  [Proceedings: Hormone studies in idiopathic scoliosis].

Authors:  P Edelmann; D Gupta
Journal:  Z Orthop Ihre Grenzgeb       Date:  1974-08

9.  [Prognostic estimation of scolioses in puberty with reference to results of laboratory diagnosis].

Authors:  R Mühlbach
Journal:  Beitr Orthop Traumatol       Date:  1974-05

10.  Some biochemical aspects of scoliosis and their pathogenetic significance.

Authors:  T Y Balaba
Journal:  Reconstr Surg Traumatol       Date:  1972
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  1 in total

1.  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
  1 in total

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