Objective: The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of curable
and pseudoarthrosis stages of adolescent lumbar spondylolysis under high school students
complaining of and seeking medical consultation for low back pain.Patients and Methods: We analyzed age, sex, morbidity, presence of spina
bifida occulta (SBO), and competitive sport discipline of patients with lumbar
spondylolysis. We then stratified their pathological stage using a modified classification
system via magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography.Results: Of 507 patients, 451 lesions in 268 patients were diagnosed with
lumbar spondylolysis (average age, 14.7 years; sex ratio, 215:53 male/female). Morbidity
levels were as follows: L1, 1 lesion in 1 patient; L2, 9 lesions in 5 patients; L3, 38
lesions in 25 patients; L4, 106 lesions in 74 patients; L5, 297 lesions in 189 patients,
and SBO verified in 111 patients. A total of 264 patients played a specific sport:
baseball, 93; soccer, 49; volleyball, 21; track and field, 21; basketball, 20; others,
164. The prevalence of curable- and pseudoarthrosis-stage lumbar spondylolysis was 206
lesions in 142 patients, and 141 lesions in 87 patients, respectively.Conclusion: With 59.3% of patients having curable-stage lumbar
spondylolysis, adolescent athletes with low back pain are urged to seek consultation.
Furthermore, clinicians should perform magnetic resonance imaging to avoid
misdiagnosis.
Background
If bone union is expected, conservative treatment is generally selected for lumbar spondylolysis. However, sometimes conservative treatments are unsuccessful. We sought to determine the factors associated with failure of bony union in acute unilateral lumbar spondylolysis with bone marrow edema including contralateral pseudarthrosis.
Methods
This study targeted unilateral lumbar spondylolysis treated conservatively in high school or younger students. Conservative therapy was continued until the bone marrow edema disappeared on MRI and bone union was investigated by CT. We conducted a univariate analysis of sex, age, pathological stage, lesion level complicating the contralateral bone defect, lesion level, and intercurrent spina bifida occulta, and variables with p < 0.1 were considered in a logistic regression analysis. An item with p < 0.05 was defined as a factor associated with failure of bony union.
Results
We found 92 cases of unilateral spondylolysis with bone marrow edema and 66 cases were successfully treated conservatively. Failure of bony union in unilateral lumbar spondylolysis with bone marrow edema was associated with progressive pathological stage (p = 0.004), contralateral pseudarthrosis (p < 0.001), and L5 lesion level (p = 0.002). The odds ratio was 20.0 (95% CI 3.0–193.9) for progressive pathological stage, 78.8 (95% CI 13–846) for contralateral pseudarthrosis, and 175 (95% CI 8.5–8192) for L5 lesion level.
Conclusions
Conservative therapy aiming at bony union is contraindicated in cases of acute unilateral spondylolysis when the pathological stage is progressive, the lesion level is L5, or there is contralateral pseudarthrotic spondylolysis.
Three types of sacral alar fatigue fractures are elderly, postnatal, and sport-related. They are most prevalent in athletes during adulthood; there are few reports of sacral alar fatigue fractures in young athletes. The purpose of this study was to analyze sacral alar fatigue fractures in adolescent athletes. Of the 920 patients hospitalized with low back pain, 13 were diagnosed with sacral alar fatigue fractures with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) abnormalities. We investigated age, sex, sports discipline, span from symptom onset to consultation, laterality, complication with spondylolysis, computed tomography (CT) findings, and treatment span. The average age was 14.5 years old (8-men and 5-women). The most frequent discipline was basketball. The span to consultation was 13.2 days. The number of right-side cases was 9. Seven cases were complicated by bilateral spondylolysis. MRI abnormalities were observed in all the cases. Only two patients showed abnormal findings on CT. Averagely 67 days after treatment, participants returned to their sports. Sacral alar fatigue fractures suggest that the span from onset to consultation is short. Fracture lines are often unclear on CT, and MRI is useful for diagnosis. More than half of the cases in this study were complicated by lumbar spondylolysis.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.