The correlation between magnetic resonance imaging and the operative and clinical findings after lumbar microdiscectomy
Fifty-four consecutive patients were studied prospectively with magnetic resonance imaging before microdiscectomy, and the findings correlated with clinical symptoms before and after operation. A sequestrated fragment was found in 59% of cases, a subligamentous disc sequestration in 25% and a disc p...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International orthopaedics 1998, Vol.22 (4), p.241-244 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Fifty-four consecutive patients were studied prospectively with magnetic resonance imaging before microdiscectomy, and the findings correlated with clinical symptoms before and after operation. A sequestrated fragment was found in 59% of cases, a subligamentous disc sequestration in 25% and a disc protrusion in 16%. The levels operated on were L4/5-36%, L5/S1-62.5%, and one at L3/4; 71% were laterally placed, 10% lay intraforaminal and 10% medial. The diameter of the protrusion was 4 mm to 13 mm for the craniocaudal extension, and 5 mm to 18 mm for the anteroposterior extension. No correlation could be found between a neurological deficit and the size of the prolapse. A positive correlation was present between the increasing degree of canal obstruction and the degree of disc degeneration determined by imaging for extrusions, subligamentous disc sequestrations and free sequestrations. Nerve root inflammation and enlargement was seen in 36% of the images, corresponding to an operative finding of 32%. Magnetic resonance imaging is a helpful pre-operative diagnostic investigation which shows structural changes in the disc and the correct localisation and size of the disc sequestration, but there was no correlation between the imaging findings and the clinical symptoms. |
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ISSN: | 0341-2695 1432-5195 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s002640050250 |