TY - JOUR
T1 - The thoracolumbar spine in Marfan syndrome
AU - Sponseller, P. D.
AU - Hobbs, W.
AU - Riley, L. H.
AU - Pyeritz, R. E.
PY - 1995
Y1 - 1995
N2 - We analyzed the prevalence, inheritance, progression, and functional implications of spinal deformity in Marfan syndrome using four different groups of patients. We studied 113 patients who had Marfan syndrome, eighty- two of whom were skeletally immature, in order to characterize the alignment and function of the spine. The patients were selected from a clinic that provides total care with no bias toward the presence of orthopaedic conditions. Scoliosis was identified in fifty-two of the eighty-two patients, and the prevalences for the sexes were equal. The thoracic portion of the curve was convex to the right in all but two patients. The mean kyphosis was greater than that in the general population. Five distinct sagittal profiles were identified on the basis of whether the thoracic kyphosis was within, greater than, or less than normal limits and whether the transition between the kyphosis and lordosis occurred at or caudad to the normal level or whether the curves were reversed. Spondylolisthesis was present in five patients (6 per cent), with a mean slip of 30 per cent. Fourteen pedigrees were studied in depth. There was no familial pattern of the scoliosis. A separate group of fifty-six patients with scoliosis, for whom serial follow- up radiographs were available, was studied for progression. Patients who had a curve of more than 30 degrees had mild progression, and those who had a curve of more than 50 degrees had marked progression (mean, 3 ± 4 degrees per year). Pain and function of the back were studied in thirty patterns who were thirty-five to forty-five years old; these patients were found to be more impaired than matched controls. The presence of scoliosis was associated with pain in the region of the curve in these patients.
AB - We analyzed the prevalence, inheritance, progression, and functional implications of spinal deformity in Marfan syndrome using four different groups of patients. We studied 113 patients who had Marfan syndrome, eighty- two of whom were skeletally immature, in order to characterize the alignment and function of the spine. The patients were selected from a clinic that provides total care with no bias toward the presence of orthopaedic conditions. Scoliosis was identified in fifty-two of the eighty-two patients, and the prevalences for the sexes were equal. The thoracic portion of the curve was convex to the right in all but two patients. The mean kyphosis was greater than that in the general population. Five distinct sagittal profiles were identified on the basis of whether the thoracic kyphosis was within, greater than, or less than normal limits and whether the transition between the kyphosis and lordosis occurred at or caudad to the normal level or whether the curves were reversed. Spondylolisthesis was present in five patients (6 per cent), with a mean slip of 30 per cent. Fourteen pedigrees were studied in depth. There was no familial pattern of the scoliosis. A separate group of fifty-six patients with scoliosis, for whom serial follow- up radiographs were available, was studied for progression. Patients who had a curve of more than 30 degrees had mild progression, and those who had a curve of more than 50 degrees had marked progression (mean, 3 ± 4 degrees per year). Pain and function of the back were studied in thirty patterns who were thirty-five to forty-five years old; these patients were found to be more impaired than matched controls. The presence of scoliosis was associated with pain in the region of the curve in these patients.
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U2 - 10.2106/00004623-199506000-00007
DO - 10.2106/00004623-199506000-00007
M3 - Article
C2 - 7782359
AN - SCOPUS:0029027288
SN - 0021-9355
VL - 77
SP - 867
EP - 876
JO - Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery
JF - Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery
IS - 6
ER -