作者
Dino Samartzis,Jason Pui Yin Cheung,S. Rajasekaran,Yoshiharu Kawaguchi,Shankar Acharya,Mamoru Kawakami,S Satoh,Wen Jer Chen,Chun Kun Park,Chong Suh Lee,T Foocharoen,Hideki Nagashima,Sung Uk Kuh,Zhaomin Zheng,R Condor,Manabu Ito,Motoki Iwasaki,JH Jeong,Keith D. K. Luk,B Prijambodo,A Rege,Tae Ahn Jahng,Zhuojing Luo,W Tassanawipas,N Acharya,Rohit Kumar Pokharel,Y Shen,Takui Ito,Zhihai Zhang,Janardhana Aithala P,GV Kumar,Rahyussalim Ahmad Jabir,Saumyajit Basu,B Li,Vishal Moudgil,Ben Goss,Phoebe Sham,Richard Williams
摘要
Study Design An international, multicenter cross-sectional image-based study performed in 33 institutions in the Asia Pacific region. Objective The study addressed the role of facet joint angulation and tropism in relation to L4–L5 degenerative spondylolisthesis (DS). Methods The study included 349 patients (63% females; mean age: 61.8 years) with single-level DS; 82 had no L4–L5 DS (group A) and 267 had L4–L5 DS (group B). Axial computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging were utilized to assess facet joint angulations and tropism (i.e., asymmetry between facet joint angulations) between groups. Results There was a statistically significant difference between group A (left mean: 46.1 degrees; right mean: 48.2 degrees) and group B (left mean: 55.4 degrees; right mean: 57.5 degrees) in relation to bilateral L4–L5 facet joint angulations ( p p = 0.025). A critical value of 58 degrees or greater significantly increased the likelihood of DS if unilateral (adjusted OR: 2.5; 95% CI: 1.2 to 5.5; p = 0.021) or bilateral facets (adjusted OR: 5.9; 95% CI: 2.7 to 13.2; p p = 0.027). Conclusions In one of the largest studies assessing facet joint orientation in patients with DS, greater sagittal facet joint angulation was associated with L4-L5 DS, with a critical value of 58 degrees or greater increasing the likelihood of the condition for unilateral and bilateral facet joint involvement. Specific facet joint tropism categories were noted to be associated with DS.