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img  1:  Adult spinal deformity-postoperative standing imbalance: how much can you tolerate? An overview of key parameters in assessing alignment and planning corrective surgery.
 
著者: Frank Schwab, Ashish Patel, Benjamin Ungar, Jean-Pierre Farcy, Virginie Lafage
雑誌名: Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2010 Dec 1;35(25):2224-31. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0b013e3181ee6bd4.
Abstract/Text STUDY DESIGN: Current concepts review.
OBJECTIVE: Outline the basic principles in the evaluation and treatment of adult spinal deformity patients with a focus on goals to achieve during surgical realignment surgery.
SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Proper global alignment of the spine is critical in maintaining standing posture and balance in an efficient and pain-free manner. Outcomes data demonstrate the clinical effect of spinopelvic malalignment and form a basis for realignment strategies.
METHODS: Correlation between certain radiographic parameters and patient self-reported pain and disability has been established. Using normative values for several important spinopelvic parameters (including sagittal vertical axis, pelvic tilt, and lumbar lordosis), spinopelvic radiographic realignment objectives were identified as a tool for clinical application. Because of the complex relationship between the spine and the pelvis in maintaining posture and the wide range of "normal" values for the associated parameters, a focus on global alignment, with proportionality of individual parameters to each other, was pursued to provide clinical relevance to planning realignment for deformity across a range of clinical cases.
CONCLUSION: Good clinical outcome requires achieving proper spinopelvic alignment in the treatment of adult spinal deformity. Although variations in pelvic morphology exist, a framework has been established to determine ideal values for regional and global parameter in an individualized patient approach. When planning realignment surgery for adult spinal deformity, restoring low sagittal vertical axis and pelvic tilt values are critical goals, and should be combined with proportional lumbar lordosis to pelvic incidence.

PMID 21102297  Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2010 Dec 1;35(25):2224-31. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0b013e3181ee6bd4.
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