B3. Scoliosis Flashcards
What is scoliosis?
Spinal deviations caused by buckling/distortions into all planes. Deviations may be:
- lordosis
- rotation/torsion
- lateral
What is the most common scoliosis curve and what is the second most common?
Thoracic is most common followed by lumbar
What is the etiology of scoliosis?
Unknown although there are theories that have a common thread: sensory info is aberrant or misinterpreted at spinal cord level or in cortical centers which leads to inappropriate proprioceptive output.
What is the difference between functional and structural/anatomical scoliosis?
Functional scoliosis is compensatory, postural or transient while structural/anatomical scoliosis not
What are some causes of compensatory functional scoliosis?
- LLI
- pelvic subluxation with unleveling
- anatomical asymmetry or anomaly
If scoliosis curve improves with sitting, what does this tell you?
There is a functional scoliosis that is likely due to LLI instead of pelvic unleveling
What are some postural causes of functional scoliosis?
- muscular imbalance
- handedness
What are some transient cause of functional scoliosis?
- antalgic
- inflammatory
- traumatic
- psychogenic
- radiculopathy
What is the cause of structural scoliosis?
- 80 % are idiopathic
- congenital
- Scheuermann’s
- mesenchymal disorder
- neurofibromatosis
- neuromuscular disorder (neuro or myopathic)
- metabolic disorder (RIckets, osteogenesis imperfecta)
- vertebral neoplasm (osteoid osteoma)
- acquired/traumatic
Who gets scoliosis?
- girls 10-12
- boys 11-16
Is pain a common complaint with structural scoliosis?
No, only about 25% have pain and it is usually mild.
Severe pain requires a search for disease process
What are some disease processes that could cause structural scoliosis?
- spinal infection
- spinal tumor (osteoid osteoma)
- chiari type 1 with syrinx
- tethered spinal cord
What 5 strategies would be used on exam for evaluating scoliosis?
- observe for associated findings (club foot, cafe au lait spots, etc)
- perform postural assessment
- Adam’s test
- leg length check
- neurological screen
Weakness or spasticity, abnormal sensation and/or abnormal reflexes on neuro exam of patient with scoliosis may indicate:
Tethered cord syndrome or syringomyelia
What is a positive Adam’s test?
Patient stands and then bends over. A fixed rotational prominence on the convex side of a scoliosis curve (razorback spine) would be a positive Adam’s test. This should be repeated sitting and prone. If the prominence improves with sitting or prone, the scoliosis is functional
With a positive Adam’s test, a scoliometer is then used to measure the prominence. What scoliometer reading would suggest scoliosis?
> /= 7 degrees
What should be done if the scoliometer reading is >/= 7 degrees?
Order radiograph
What should be done if the scoliometer reading is < 7 degrees?
Follow up in 6-12 months
What kind of radiographs should be obtained when screening for scoliosis?
Full spine and recumbent and lateral bend into convexity
What are you looking for on radiographs when screening for scoliosis?
- congenital findings such as hemivertebrae
- location of curve
- pelvic unleveling
- Cobb angel
- bone age with Risser sign
Direction of a scoliosis curve is defined based on:
the direction of the convexity
I.e. left curve has apex on left
What curve is more common, right or left?
> 90% are convexity right
How do you measure a Cobb angle?
- determine primary/major curve
- draw line across top of superior vertebral segment in primary curve
- draw line across bottom of inferior vertebral segment in primary curve
- draw perpendicular and intersections lines from each of the vertebral lines
- the angle the perpendicular line intersect to form is the Cobb angle
What is the minimum angulation of a Cobb angel to define scoliosis?
10 degrees
Why does the time of day radiographs are taken matter when evaluating for scoliosis?
IVD swelling in the AM vs PM can cause an average difference of 5 degrees (sometimes 10-20 degrees)
What Risser numbers are considered immature?
1-2
What Risser numbers are considered mature?
3-5
What is a Risser number?
A number indicating the percent ossification of iliac epiphysis and therefore skeletal maturity. Smaller Risser number = more epiphyseal plate present and therefore more skeletal immaturity