Lorenc T, Gołębiowski M, Michalski W, Glinkowski W. High-resolution, three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging axial load dynamic study improves diagnostics of the lumbar spine in clinical practice. World J Orthop 2022; 13(1): 87-101 [PMID: 35096539 DOI: 10.5312/wjo.v13.i1.87]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Tomasz Lorenc, MD, PhD, Associate Professor, Ist Department of Clinical Radiology, Medical University of Warsaw, 5 Chalubinskiego Street, Warsaw 02-004, Poland. tlorenc@wum.edu.pl
Research Domain of This Article
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
Article-Type of This Article
Observational Study
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Table 2 Cross-sectional area of the ligamentum flavum on the same levels with and without axial loading on both sides
Ligamenta flava(right + left) / section of the spine
Mean difference of area between unloaded and axial loading (%)
95%CI
P value
Lower
Upper
L1-L2
4.1
1.8
6.4
0.001
L2-L3
4.8
2.0
7.6
0.001
L3-L4
4.0
0.5
4.7
0.024
L4-L5
2.1
-0.5
6.3
0.116
L5-S1
4.1
2.5
5.2
< 0.001
All from L1-L2 to L5-S1
3.8
2.5
5.2
< 0.001
Table 3 Percentage difference of the cross-sectional area of the dural sac on transverse, T2-dependent magnetic resonance imaging at the same levels for phases both with and without axial loading
Dural sac/section of the spine
Mean difference of area between unloaded and axial loading (%)
95%CI
P value
Lower
Upper
L1-L2
-2.6
-3.6
-1.6
< 0.001
L2-L3
-5.5
-6.8
-4.2
< 0.001
L3-L4
-6.7
-8.9
-4.4
< 0.001
L4-L5
-8.1
-10.5
-5.7
< 0.001
L5-S1
-3.0
-4.9
-1.0
0.004
All from L1-L2 to L5-S1
-5.2
-6.2
-4.1
< 0.001
Table 4 Percentage difference of the sagittal cross-sectional area of vertebral foramina on the same levels both with and without axial loading on both sides
Intervertebral foramina (right + left)/section of the spine
Mean difference of area between unloaded and axial loading (%)
95%CI
P value
Lower
Upper
L1-L2
-4.0
-5.1
-2.9
< 0.001
L2-L3
-6.7
-8.0
-5.5
< 0.001
L3-L4
-5.1
-6.2
-4.0
< 0.001
L4-L5
-3.3
-4.8
-1.7
< 0.001
L5-S1
2.0
0.5
3.9
0.045
All from L1-L2 to L5-S1
-3.4
-4.1
-2.7
< 0.001
Table 5 Percentage difference of the lumbosacral angles between L1 and S1 measured based on recumbent and axial-loaded magnetic resonance images
Lumbosacral angle
Mean difference of angle between unloaded and axial loading (%)
95%CI
P value
Lower
Upper
From L1 to S1
7.7
5.7
9.6
< 0.001
Table 6 Degenerative pathologies of the lumbar spine
Analyzed factors
Grade
n
%
Intervertebral disc degeneration according to Pfirrmann et al[38] classification
1
0
0
2
72
16
3
196
44
4
159
35
5
23
5
Facet joint degeneration, according to Weishaupt et al[39] classification
0
300
33
1
405
45
2
149
17
3
46
5
Grade of lumbar spinal canal stenosis according to Schizas et al[40] classification
A1
349
78
A2
22
5
A3
47
10
A4
3
1
B
20
4
C
7
2
D
2
0
Disc herniation according to the Michigan State University[42] classification of lumbar disc herniation
0
342
76
1a, 1b, 1ab, 1c
88
20
2a, 2b, 2ab, 2c
18
4
3a, 3b, 3ab, 3c
2
0
Foraminal stenosis, according to Lee et al[41] classification
0
664
74
1
168
19
2
56
6
3
12
1
Citation: Lorenc T, Gołębiowski M, Michalski W, Glinkowski W. High-resolution, three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging axial load dynamic study improves diagnostics of the lumbar spine in clinical practice. World J Orthop 2022; 13(1): 87-101