Objective: To evaluate the prevalence and clinical features of destructive abnormalities of the discovertebral junction in psoriatic arthritis (PsA).
Methods: One hundred consecutive patients with PsA (38 with spondylitis, 48 with polyarthritis, 14 with oligoarthritis; 52 men and 48 women; mean age 45.74 years, range 18-76, mean duration of disease 79.84 mo, range 8-336) were evaluated. The study protocol included a questionnaire on the patient's usual work, occurrence of previous trauma or infection to the spine, characteristics of articular involvement, and presence and characteristics of back pain. Radiographic study of involved joints and of the spine was performed and lesions occurring at the discovertebral junction were classified according to Cawley's suggestions.
Results: Twelve patients showed destructive abnormalities of the discovertebral junction (12.0%). These patients had age and disease duration significantly greater than the patients without abnormalities (p = 0.0001 and 0.0001, respectively). Nine of them had spondylitis and 3 polyarthritis (p = 0.02). Cervical tract was affected in 4 cases (33.3%) and thoracic in 12 (100%). Lumbar spine changes occurred in 6 patients (50%). Lesions were localized to only one level in 4 cases and at multiple levels in the remaining 8. According to Cawley's classification type 1 lesions involved 6 thoracic discovertebral junctions, type 2 involved 15 junctions (4 cervical, 5 thoracic, 6 lumbar), type 3 only one thoracic junction. Back pain occurred in only 5 cases (41.6%), all belonging to the spondylitic subset. Pain was localized to those tracts of the spine with radiographically documented disease and was exacerbated with physical activity.
Conclusion: Discovertebral erosions seem to be another characteristic aspect of spondyloarthropathies. In PsA, the lesions occur markedly in older spondylitic patients with a greater duration of disease and may often be totally asymptomatic.
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Sensors (Basel)
September 2024
Department of Radiology, VA San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, CA 92161, USA.
Introduction: The disco-vertebral junction (DVJ) of the lumbar spine contains thin structures with short T2 values, including the cartilaginous endplate (CEP) sandwiched between the bony vertebral endplate (VEP) and the nucleus pulposus (NP). We previously demonstrated that ultrashort-echo-time (UTE) MRI, compared to conventional MRI, is able to depict the tissues at the DVJ with improved contrast. In this study, we sought to further optimize UTE MRI by characterizing the contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) of these tissues when either single echo or echo subtraction images are used and with varying echo times (TEs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur Spine J
July 2023
Department of Radiology, University of California, 9427 Health Sciences Drive, La Jolla, CA, 92093-0997, USA.
Purpose: Using ultrashort echo time (UTE) MRI, we determined prevalence of abnormal cartilaginous endplate (CEP), and the relationship between CEP and disc degeneration in human lumbar spines.
Materials And Methods: Lumbar spines from 71 cadavers (age 14-74 years) were imaged at 3 T using sagittal UTE and spin echo T2 map sequences. On UTE images, CEP morphology was defined as "normal" with linear high signal intensity or "abnormal" with focal signal loss and/or irregularity.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)
February 2022
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Shanghai Ninth People's Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China.
Andersson lesions (ALs) in ankylosing spondylitis (AS) pose a severe risk to the stability of ankylosed spine, which might result in significant deterioration of spinal cord function after traumatic or inflammatory causes. Herein, erosive discovertebral lesions in diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH) presented important clinical similarities to AL in AS, but failed to completely recognize unstable spinal lesions. Therefore, we pioneered to identify spinal discovertebral lesions similar to Andersson-like lesions (ALLs) in DISH, followed by the characterization and summarization of the etiology, radiology, laboratory results, clinical symptoms, and treatment strategies for AL in AS with ALL in DISH.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChin Med J (Engl)
June 2021
Department of Spine Surgery, Affiliated Drum Tower Hospital, Medical School of Nanjing University, Nanjing, Jiangsu 210008, China.
Background: Andersson lesions (ALs) are not uncommon in ankylosing spondylitis (AS). Plain radiography (PR) is widely used for the diagnosis of ALs. However, in our practice, there were some ALs in AS patients that could not be detected on plain radiographs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAsian Spine J
November 2018
Department of Spine Surgery, Wockhardt Hospitals Limited, Mumbai, India.
Study Design: This retrospective study was conducted including 18 patients who underwent posterior-only stabilization and fusion procedure for pseudoarthrosis in the ankylosed spine from October 2007 to May 2015.
Purpose: This study aimed to describe the treatment outcomes in 18 patients with Andersson lesion (AL) who were managed using the posterior-only approach. Literature Review: AL is an unstable, localized, vertebral, or discovertebral lesion of the spine.
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