Clinical and radiological factors related to the presence of motor deficit in lumbar disc prolapse: a prospective analysis of 70 consecutive cases with neurological deficit
- PMID: 28331979
- DOI: 10.1007/s00586-017-5019-5
Clinical and radiological factors related to the presence of motor deficit in lumbar disc prolapse: a prospective analysis of 70 consecutive cases with neurological deficit
Abstract
Purpose: To analyse the clinic-radiological factors associated with neurological deficit following lumbar disc herniation.
Methods: A prospective, cross-sectional study was performed in 140 cases of micro-discectomy following lumbar disc herniation. Group 1 included 70 consecutive patients with motor deficit and group 2 (controls) included 70 patients with intact neurology. Motor deficit was defined as the occurrence of motor power ≤3/5 in L2-S1 myotomes. Multiple clinical and radiological parameters were studied between the two groups.
Results: Patients with diabetes (p 0.004), acute onset of symptoms (p 0.036), L3-4 discs (p 0.001), sequestrated discs (p 0.004), superiorly migrated discs (p 0.012) and central discs (p 0.004), greater antero-posterior disc dimension (p 0.023), primary canal stenosis (p 0.0001); and greater canal compromise (p 0.002) had a significant correlation with the development of neurological deficit. The presence of four or more of these risk factors showed a higher chance of the presence of motor deficit (sensitivity of 74%, specificity of 77%). Age, sex, previous precipitating events, severity of pain, smoking, and number of herniations levels did not affect the occurrence of deficit (p > 0.05 for all). Patients with or without bladder symptoms were similar with respect to all clinico-radiological parameters. However, the time delay since the occurrence of deficit was significantly shorter in patients with bladder involvement (p 0.001).
Conclusion: Patients with diabetes, acute presentation, central, sequestrated and superiorly migrated discs, high lumbar disc prolapse, and greater spinal canal compromise are predisposed to the presence of motor deficit.
Keywords: Clinico-radiological factors; Lumbar disc prolapse; Neurodeficit; Prognosis; Recovery.
Comment in
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Letter to the Editor concerning "Clinical and radiological factors related to the presence of motor deficit in lumbar disc prolapse: a prospective analysis of 70 consecutive cases with neurological deficit" by V. Krishnan et al. [Eur Spine J (2017) 26:2642-2649).Eur Spine J. 2018 Apr;27(4):916-917. doi: 10.1007/s00586-018-5467-6. Epub 2018 Jan 15. Eur Spine J. 2018. PMID: 29335902 No abstract available.
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Answer to the Letter to the Editor of P. Kumar et al. concerning "Clinical and radiological factors related to the presence of motor deficit in lumbar disc prolapse: a prospective analysis of 70 consecutive cases with neurological deficit" by V. Krishnan et al. [Eur Spine J (2017) 26:2642-2649].Eur Spine J. 2018 Apr;27(4):918-920. doi: 10.1007/s00586-018-5473-8. Epub 2018 Jan 19. Eur Spine J. 2018. PMID: 29352354 No abstract available.
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