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Age-Related Loss of Lumbar Spinal Lordosis and Mobility – A Study of 323 Asymptomatic Volunteers

BACKGROUND: The understanding of the individual shape and mobility of the lumbar spine are key factors for the prevention and treatment of low back pain. The influence of age and sex on the total lumbar lordosis and the range of motion as well as on different lumbar sub-regions (lower, middle and up...

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Autores principales: Dreischarf, Marcel, Albiol, Laia, Rohlmann, Antonius, Pries, Esther, Bashkuev, Maxim, Zander, Thomas, Duda, Georg, Druschel, Claudia, Strube, Patrick, Putzier, Michael, Schmidt, Hendrik
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4280226/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25549085
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116186
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author Dreischarf, Marcel
Albiol, Laia
Rohlmann, Antonius
Pries, Esther
Bashkuev, Maxim
Zander, Thomas
Duda, Georg
Druschel, Claudia
Strube, Patrick
Putzier, Michael
Schmidt, Hendrik
author_facet Dreischarf, Marcel
Albiol, Laia
Rohlmann, Antonius
Pries, Esther
Bashkuev, Maxim
Zander, Thomas
Duda, Georg
Druschel, Claudia
Strube, Patrick
Putzier, Michael
Schmidt, Hendrik
author_sort Dreischarf, Marcel
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The understanding of the individual shape and mobility of the lumbar spine are key factors for the prevention and treatment of low back pain. The influence of age and sex on the total lumbar lordosis and the range of motion as well as on different lumbar sub-regions (lower, middle and upper lordosis) in asymptomatic subjects still merits discussion, since it is essential for patient-specific treatment and evidence-based distinction between painful degenerative pathologies and asymptomatic aging. METHODS AND FINDINGS: A novel non-invasive measuring system was used to assess the total and local lumbar shape and its mobility of 323 asymptomatic volunteers (age: 20–75 yrs; BMI <26.0 kg/m(2); males/females: 139/184). The lumbar lordosis for standing and the range of motion for maximal upper body flexion (RoF) and extension (RoE) were determined. The total lordosis was significantly reduced by approximately 20%, the RoF by 12% and the RoE by 31% in the oldest (>50 yrs) compared to the youngest age cohort (20–29 yrs). Locally, these decreases mostly occurred in the middle part of the lordosis and less towards the lumbo-sacral and thoraco-lumbar transitions. The sex only affected the RoE. CONCLUSIONS: During aging, the lower lumbar spine retains its lordosis and mobility, whereas the middle part flattens and becomes less mobile. These findings lay the ground for a better understanding of the incidence of level- and age-dependent spinal disorders, and may have important implications for the clinical long-term success of different surgical interventions.
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spelling pubmed-42802262015-01-07 Age-Related Loss of Lumbar Spinal Lordosis and Mobility – A Study of 323 Asymptomatic Volunteers Dreischarf, Marcel Albiol, Laia Rohlmann, Antonius Pries, Esther Bashkuev, Maxim Zander, Thomas Duda, Georg Druschel, Claudia Strube, Patrick Putzier, Michael Schmidt, Hendrik PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The understanding of the individual shape and mobility of the lumbar spine are key factors for the prevention and treatment of low back pain. The influence of age and sex on the total lumbar lordosis and the range of motion as well as on different lumbar sub-regions (lower, middle and upper lordosis) in asymptomatic subjects still merits discussion, since it is essential for patient-specific treatment and evidence-based distinction between painful degenerative pathologies and asymptomatic aging. METHODS AND FINDINGS: A novel non-invasive measuring system was used to assess the total and local lumbar shape and its mobility of 323 asymptomatic volunteers (age: 20–75 yrs; BMI <26.0 kg/m(2); males/females: 139/184). The lumbar lordosis for standing and the range of motion for maximal upper body flexion (RoF) and extension (RoE) were determined. The total lordosis was significantly reduced by approximately 20%, the RoF by 12% and the RoE by 31% in the oldest (>50 yrs) compared to the youngest age cohort (20–29 yrs). Locally, these decreases mostly occurred in the middle part of the lordosis and less towards the lumbo-sacral and thoraco-lumbar transitions. The sex only affected the RoE. CONCLUSIONS: During aging, the lower lumbar spine retains its lordosis and mobility, whereas the middle part flattens and becomes less mobile. These findings lay the ground for a better understanding of the incidence of level- and age-dependent spinal disorders, and may have important implications for the clinical long-term success of different surgical interventions. Public Library of Science 2014-12-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4280226/ /pubmed/25549085 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116186 Text en © 2014 Dreischarf et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dreischarf, Marcel
Albiol, Laia
Rohlmann, Antonius
Pries, Esther
Bashkuev, Maxim
Zander, Thomas
Duda, Georg
Druschel, Claudia
Strube, Patrick
Putzier, Michael
Schmidt, Hendrik
Age-Related Loss of Lumbar Spinal Lordosis and Mobility – A Study of 323 Asymptomatic Volunteers
title Age-Related Loss of Lumbar Spinal Lordosis and Mobility – A Study of 323 Asymptomatic Volunteers
title_full Age-Related Loss of Lumbar Spinal Lordosis and Mobility – A Study of 323 Asymptomatic Volunteers
title_fullStr Age-Related Loss of Lumbar Spinal Lordosis and Mobility – A Study of 323 Asymptomatic Volunteers
title_full_unstemmed Age-Related Loss of Lumbar Spinal Lordosis and Mobility – A Study of 323 Asymptomatic Volunteers
title_short Age-Related Loss of Lumbar Spinal Lordosis and Mobility – A Study of 323 Asymptomatic Volunteers
title_sort age-related loss of lumbar spinal lordosis and mobility – a study of 323 asymptomatic volunteers
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4280226/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25549085
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116186
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