Publication | Closed Access
Lumbar degenerative kyphosis. Clinical, radiological and epidemiological studies.
300
Citations
0
References
1988
Year
Marked AtrophySpine DeformitySpinal DisorderOrthopaedic SurgeryLumbar SpineKinesiologySurgical PathologyApplied PhysiologyNeuropathologyHealth SciencesDegenerative DiseasesRehabilitationLumbar Degenerative KyphosisPhysical TherapyLumbosacral RadiculopathyUrologyDegenerative SpineDegenerative DiseaseMedicine
We suggest that lumbar degenerative kyphosis be included as one of the abnormal sagittal curvatures in which a kyphosis or a marked loss of lordosis is seen in the lumbar spine, caused by degenerative changes in middle-aged and elderly. One hundred and five consecutive patients were investigated, most of whom complained of low-back pain, often with a long history. They all walked in a forward bending posture, either all the time or only when exhausted. In roentgenograms, most cases showed a marked loss of the sacral inclination, as well as multiple disc narrowing and/or vertebral wedging in the lumbar region. These subjects showed a definite weakness of the lumbar extensors compared to the flexors, and therefore a reversed ratio of extensors/flexors muscle power compared with normal controls and other types of spinal curvatures. Weakness of the lumbar extensors was clearly shown by isokinetic measurement and a marked atrophy of these muscles with fatty infiltration was demonstrated by CT scanning.