The radio anatomical arrangement of nerve roots at L3 level in cauda equina sac is it affected by diseases?

Medicine (Baltimore)

Department of Surgery/Orthopedic, Al-Iraqia University, College of Medicine, Adhamyia, Iraq.

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study was conducted to identify common conditions affecting the lumbosacral area through MRI examinations, observing the position and number of nerve roots in patients.
  • The study focused on comparing normal cases to five specific conditions: single-level lumbar disc prolapse, multiple disc prolapse, multiple bulge, spinal stenosis, and spondylolisthesis, specifically around L3, noting significant differences in nerve root counts.
  • Results indicated that the severity of conditions had a proportional relationship with nerve root changes, showing a marked increase in significance from single-level issues to more complex diseases like spondylolisthesis.

Article Abstract

An observational study to discover the common conditions affecting the lumbosacral region that may affect lumbosacral position and tension. All the patients, underwent MRI exaamination (magnetic resonance imaging) in the supine position, were examined by the same consultant radiologist. The article was revised by the institutional ethical approval committee. The position of the nerve roots was observed, and the number of nerve roots was calculated anterior to a line passing between the mid-transvers process of L3(third lumbar vertebra). The number of nerve roots ahead of this line was calculated by the radiologist at the level of the right intervertebral foramen and at the left one. This procedure was applied to the normal group, and 5 common pathological diseases were repeated including single-level lumbar disc prolapse, multiple-disc prolapse, multiple bulge, spinal stenosis and spondylolisthesis (at the level of L45 (fourth to fifth lumbar vertebrae) or L5S1 (fifth lumbar to first sacral vertebrae) being outside the study area, i.e., L3). We noticed significant difference in the number of the nerve roots between the cases with herniated discs, spinal stenosis, and spondylolisthesis with the normal group and the significance was in ascending increment in significance being the highest in cases with spondylolisthesis, and even in the groups of other pathologies which are statistically not significant, we noticed that the significance is proportional to the severity of the disease being the least in single level cases (p 0.427), to be more significant on cases with multiple prolapses(p 0.319) to be more in cases with multiple bulges to start to be statistically significant in herniated, higher significance in cases with spinal stenosis to be the highest in cases with spondylolisthesis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11466170PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000038681DOI Listing

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