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. 2019 Aug 16;24(5):520-527.
doi: 10.3171/2019.5.PEDS18527. Print 2019 Nov 1.

Radiological and clinical predictors of scoliosis in patients with Chiari malformation type I and spinal cord syrinx from the Park-Reeves Syringomyelia Research Consortium

Jennifer M Strahle  1 Rukayat Taiwo  1 Christine Averill  1 James Torner  2 Chevis N Shannon  3 Christopher M Bonfield  3 Gerald F Tuite  4 Tammy Bethel-Anderson  1 Jerrel Rutlin  5 Douglas L Brockmeyer  6 John C Wellons  3 Jeffrey R Leonard  7 Francesco T Mangano  8 James M Johnston  9 Manish N Shah  10 Bermans J Iskandar  11 Elizabeth C Tyler-Kabara  12 David J Daniels  13 Eric M Jackson  14 Gerald A Grant  15 Daniel E Couture  16 P David Adelson  17 Tord D Alden  18 Philipp R Aldana  19 Richard C E Anderson  20 Nathan R Selden  21 Lissa C Baird  21 Karin Bierbrauer  8 Joshua J Chern  22 William E Whitehead  23 Richard G Ellenbogen  24 Herbert E Fuchs  25 Daniel J Guillaume  26 Todd C Hankinson  27 Mark R Iantosca  28 W Jerry Oakes  9 Robert F Keating  29 Nickalus R Khan  30 Michael S Muhlbauer  30 J Gordon McComb  31 Arnold H Menezes  32 John Ragheb  33 Jodi L Smith  34 Cormac O Maher  35 Stephanie Greene  12 Michael Kelly  36 Brent R O'Neill  27 Mark D Krieger  31 Mandeep Tamber  37 Susan R Durham  38 Greg Olavarria  39 Scellig S D Stone  40 Bruce A Kaufman  41 Gregory G Heuer  42 David F Bauer  43 Gregory Albert  44 Jeffrey P Greenfield  45 Scott D Wait  46 Mark D Van Poppel  46 Ramin Eskandari  47 Timothy Mapstone  48 Joshua S Shimony  5 Ralph G Dacey  1 Matthew D Smyth  1 Tae Sung Park  1 David D Limbrick  1
Affiliations

Radiological and clinical predictors of scoliosis in patients with Chiari malformation type I and spinal cord syrinx from the Park-Reeves Syringomyelia Research Consortium

Jennifer M Strahle et al. J Neurosurg Pediatr. .

Abstract

Objective: Scoliosis is frequently a presenting sign of Chiari malformation type I (CM-I) with syrinx. The authors' goal was to define scoliosis in this population and describe how radiological characteristics of CM-I and syrinx relate to the presence and severity of scoliosis.

Methods: A large multicenter retrospective and prospective registry of pediatric patients with CM-I (tonsils ≥ 5 mm below the foramen magnum) and syrinx (≥ 3 mm in axial width) was reviewed for clinical and radiological characteristics of CM-I, syrinx, and scoliosis (coronal curve ≥ 10°).

Results: Based on available imaging of patients with CM-I and syrinx, 260 of 825 patients (31%) had a clear diagnosis of scoliosis based on radiographs or coronal MRI. Forty-nine patients (5.9%) did not have scoliosis, and in 516 (63%) patients, a clear determination of the presence or absence of scoliosis could not be made. Comparison of patients with and those without a definite scoliosis diagnosis indicated that scoliosis was associated with wider syrinxes (8.7 vs 6.3 mm, OR 1.25, p < 0.001), longer syrinxes (10.3 vs 6.2 levels, OR 1.18, p < 0.001), syrinxes with their rostral extent located in the cervical spine (94% vs 80%, OR 3.91, p = 0.001), and holocord syrinxes (50% vs 16%, OR 5.61, p < 0.001). Multivariable regression analysis revealed syrinx length and the presence of holocord syrinx to be independent predictors of scoliosis in this patient cohort. Scoliosis was not associated with sex, age at CM-I diagnosis, tonsil position, pB-C2 distance (measured perpendicular distance from the ventral dura to a line drawn from the basion to the posterior-inferior aspect of C2), clivoaxial angle, or frontal-occipital horn ratio. Average curve magnitude was 29.9°, and 37.7% of patients had a left thoracic curve. Older age at CM-I or syrinx diagnosis (p < 0.0001) was associated with greater curve magnitude whereas there was no association between syrinx dimensions and curve magnitude.

Conclusions: Syrinx characteristics, but not tonsil position, were related to the presence of scoliosis in patients with CM-I, and there was an independent association of syrinx length and holocord syrinx with scoliosis. Further study is needed to evaluate the nature of the relationship between syrinx and scoliosis in patients with CM-I.

Keywords: Chiari; deformity; scoliosis; spine; syringomyelia; tonsil.

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