Publication | Closed Access
The iliolumbar ligament. A study of its anatomy, development and clinical significance
111
Citations
0
References
1986
Year
Fascial RepairIliolumbar LigamentNinth DecadeTopographical AnatomyClinical AnatomySurgeryThoracic SpineAnatomySpine DeformityOrthopaedic SurgeryGross AnatomyLumbar SpineOsteoarthritisPediatric SpineMusculoskeletal ImagingClinical SignificanceDefinitive LigamentQuadratus Lumborum MuscleScoliosisMedicineShoulder Girdle
The development of the iliolumbar ligament and its anatomy and histology were studied in cadavers from the newborn to the ninth decade. The structure was entirely muscular in the newborn and became ligamentous only from the second decade, being formed by metaplasia from fibres of the quadratus lumborum muscle. By the third decade, the definitive ligament was well formed; degenerative changes were noted in older specimens. The iliolumbar ligament may have an important role in maintaining lumbosacral stability in patients with lumbar disc degeneration, degenerative spondylolisthesis and pelvic obliquity secondary to neuromuscular scoliosis.