Recurrent postoperative sciatica: evaluation with MR imaging and enhanced CT.

Radiology

Department of Rheumatology, Hôpital Sud, Rennes, France.

Published: February 1989

Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging and computed tomography enhanced with intravenous iodine injection (ECT) were prospectively compared in 80 patients in the diagnosis of recurrent postoperative sciatica. Diagnostic accuracy was determined with surgical verification. Isolated fibrosis was considered a contraindication to surgery. A decision to operate was made in 56 of the 80 patients on the basis of MR imaging findings; in 21 of the 56, the decision was also made on the basis of ECT findings. Of the 80 patients, 45 underwent surgery, In all but one of these patients, the diagnosis made on the basis of MR imaging findings was confirmed with surgical analysis. The only surgical finding that did not agree with MR imaging findings was a calcification of the common posterior ligament. The 21 diagnoses of disk herniation based on ECT findings were confirmed surgically, but among the 24 diagnoses of fibrosis made with the help of ECT, there were actually 19 recurrent herniations, four herniations with fibrosis, and one herniation at the level above the previously resected disk. MR imaging seems to be the investigation of choice in diagnosing the cause of recurrent postoperative sciatica.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/radiology.170.2.2911682DOI Listing

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