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Paraspinal musculature impairment is associated with spinopelvic and spinal malalignment in patients undergoing lumbar fusion surgery

Authors :
Maximilian Muellner
Henryk Haffer
Manuel Moser
Erika Chiapparelli
Yusuke Dodo
Dominik Adl Amini
John A. Carrino
Ek T. Tan
Jennifer Shue
Jiaqi Zhu
Andrew A. Sama
Frank P. Cammisa
Federico P. Girardi
Alexander P. Hughes
Source :
The spine journal : official journal of the North American Spine Society. 22(12)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The concept of sagittal spinal malalignment is well established in spinal surgery. However, the effect of musculature on its development has not been fully considered and the position of the pelvis is mostly seen as compensatory and not necessarily a possible cause of sagittal imbalance.This study aimed to investigate the influence of the posterior paraspinal muscles (PPM, erector spinae, and multifidus) and the psoas muscle on spinopelvic and spinal alignment.Retrospective cross-sectional study.Patients undergoing posterior lumbar fusion between 2014 and 2021 for degenerative conditions at a tertiary care center, with preoperative lumbar magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) within 12 months prior the surgery and a preoperative whole spine radiograph were included.PPM and psoas muscle measurements including the cross-sectional area (CSA), the functional cross-sectional area (fCSA), the amount of intramuscular fat (FAT), and the percentage of fat infiltration (FI). Spinopelvic measurements including lumbar lordosis (LL), pelvic tilt (PT), sacral slope (SS), pelvic incidence (PI), and sagittal vertical axis (SVA).A T2-weighted MRI-based quantitative assessment of the CSA, the fCSA and the amount FAT was conducted, and FI was further calculated. The regions of interest included the psoas muscle and the PPM on both sides at the L4 level that were summarized and normalized by the patient's height (cmA total of 150 patients (53.3% female) were included in the final analysis with a median age of 65.6 years and a median BMI of 28.2 kg/mThis study demonstrated the potential role of posterior paraspinal muscles and psoas muscle on pelvic retroversion and elucidated the relation to sagittal spinal malalignment. Although we cannot establish causality, we propose that increasing FI

Details

ISSN :
18781632
Volume :
22
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The spine journal : official journal of the North American Spine Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0c9fd0400fa33ee117aa72a2119e3262