可改变和不可改变的危险因素与腰痛患者腰旁肌健康的关系

John Fallon BBA , Jonathan Sgaglione BS , Matthew Rohde BS , Junho Song MD , Austen D. Katz MD , Alex Ngan MD , Sarah Trent MD , Bongseok Jung BS , Adam Strigenz BA , Mitchell Seitz BS , Joshua Zhang BS , Jeff Silber MD , David Essig MD , Sheeraz Qureshi MD, MBA , Sohrab Virk MD, MBA
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景先前的研究表明,腰椎手术中肌肉减少症和棘旁肌肉脂肪浸润与腰痛、脊柱病理和不良术后结果有关。最近一项基于磁共振成像(MRI)的评估肌肉健康的方法,结合了诸如Goutallier分类(GC)和腰旁肌横截面积与身体质量指数比(pls - csa /BMI)等参数,表明较高的肌肉等级与患者报告的结果的显着改善相关。尽管取得了这些进展,但关于腰旁肌健康与年龄、体重指数、行走耐受性和脊柱滑脱等因素之间关系的研究有限。我们的研究旨在评估这种关联。方法:这项经机构审查委员会批准的回顾性队列研究纳入了18岁或以上出现背痛症状的患者,这些患者在就诊于同一位骨科医生后12个月内接受了腰椎MRI检查。排除影像学不全、肿瘤病理或创伤性损伤的患者。以mri为基础测量腰椎压痕值(LIV)、Goutallier分类(GC)和PL-CSA/BMI作为结果测量。使用ImageJ勾勒出轴向t2加权腰椎mri上的腰旁肌,通过L1-L5椎间盘间隙确定PL-CS和LIV, GC由第一作者分类。连续变量采用分位数回归分析,有序变量采用带辅助参数估计的负二项回归分析,差异有统计学意义为p<; 0.05。结果:我们的分析发现,年龄增加与所有腰椎水平的GC增加、PL-CSA降低和CSA/BMI相关。年龄与L1/L2处的LIV升高有关。我们发现BMI增加与所有腰椎水平的LIV和PL-CSA增加以及CSA/BMI降低相关,而仅与L1/L2、L2/L3和L3/L4的GC增加相关。高度的腰椎滑脱与除L3/L4外所有腰椎节段的GC恶化以及L1/L2节段的LIV降低相关。不能走路;1个区块预测L2/L3的LIV和GC,同时预测L4/L5的CSA/BMI。年龄增加与L1/L2、L2/L3和L4/L5的CSA下降有关,而与所有腰椎水平的CSA/BMI下降和GC增加有关。年龄仅与L1/L2、L2/L3处的LIV下降有关。最后,BMI增加与所有腰椎水平的CSA、LIV增加和CSA/BMI降低相关,并与除L4/L5以外的所有腰椎水平的GC增加相关。所有具有统计学意义的关联p值均为0.05。结论我们的分析表明,年龄增长、BMI增加、脊柱滑脱和行走不耐受性与腰旁肌健康状况不佳显著相关。除了这些发现外,我们还发现年龄、BMI、脊柱滑脱和行走不耐受性的增加与不同程度的Goutallier分级和LIV增加显著相关。未来的研究需要确定在可改变的危险因素改变后,腰旁肌健康是否会发生个体改变。此外,未来的努力应侧重于阐明某些不可改变的风险因素(如年龄)对Goutallier分类和较差的腰旁肌健康状况的潜在机制的影响。
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Association between modifiable and nonmodifiable risk factors with paralumbar muscle health in patients with lower back pain

Background

Prior studies have linked sarcopenia and fat infiltration in paraspinal muscles with lumbar pain, spinal pathology, and adverse postoperative outcomes in lumbar spine surgery. A recent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based method for assessing muscle health, incorporating parameters such as Goutallier Classification (GC) and the Paralumbar Muscle Cross-Sectional Area to Body Mass Index ratio (PL-CSA/BMI), has shown that higher muscle grades correlate with significant improvements in patient-reported outcomes. Despite these advancements, there is limited research on the associations between paralumbar muscle health and factors such as age, BMI, walking tolerability, and spondylolisthesis. Our study aimed to evaluate such associations.

Methods

This Institutional Review Board-approved retrospective cohort study included patients aged 18 or older presenting with back pain symptoms who underwent lumbar spine MRI within 12 months of presentation to a single orthopedic surgeon. Patients with incomplete imaging, cancer pathology, or trauma-induced injuries were excluded. MRI-based measurements of Lumbar Indentation Value (LIV), Goutallier Classification (GC), and PL-CSA/BMI were used as outcome measures. Paralumbar muscles on axial T2-weighted lumbar MRIs were outlined using ImageJ to determine the PL-CS and LIV through the L1–L5 disc spaces, with GC classified by the primary author. Quantile regression analysis was used for continuous variables, and negative binomial regression with an estimated ancillary parameter was applied for ordinal variables, with statistical significance set at p<.05.

Results

Our analysis found that increasing age was associated with increased GC, decreased PL-CSA, and CSA/BMI at all lumbar levels. Age was associated with increased LIV at L1/L2. We found that increasing BMI was associated with increased LIV and PL-CSA and decreased CSA/BMI at all lumbar levels while it was only associated with increased GC at L1/L2, L2/L3 and L3/L4. Higher grade spondylolisthesis was associated with worse GC at all lumbar spinal levels except L3/L4 and with decreased LIV at L1/L2. An inability to walk > 1 block predicted LIV and GC at L2/L3 while predicting CSA/BMI at L4/L5. Increasing age was associated with decreased CSA at L1/L2, L2/L3 and L4/L5 while it was associated with decreased CSA/BMI and increased GC at all lumbar levels. Age was only associated with decreased LIV at L1/L2, L2/L3. Lastly, increasing BMI was associated with increased CSA, LIV, and decreased CSA/BMI at all lumbar levels and associated with increased GC at all lumbar levels except L4/L5. All statistically significant associations had p-values<.05.

Conclusions

Our analysis determined that increasing age, increased BMI, spondylolisthesis, and walking intolerability are significantly associated with poor paralumbar muscle health. Alongside these findings we discovered that increased age, BMI, spondylolisthesis and walking intolerability were significantly associated with varying degrees of increased Goutallier classification and LIV. Future research is required to determine whether there can be individual alterations in paralumbar muscle health following changes in modifiable risk factors. Additionally future efforts should focus on elucidating the impact of the underlying mechanism behind certain nonmodifiable risk factors such as age on Goutallier classification and poorer paralumbar muscle health.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
71
审稿时长
48 days
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