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The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Vol 72, Issue 4 541-549, Copyright © 1990 by Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Inc


JOURNAL CONTENTS

Morphometry of the lumbar spine: anatomical perspectives related to transpedicular fixation

JM Olsewski, EH Simmons, FC Kallen, FC Mendel, CM Severin and DL Berens
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, State University of New York, Buffalo 14203.

The pedicles of lumbar vertebrae were measured both directly and radiographically to determine the differences between the sexes and the accuracy of radiographic measurement. The lumbar pedicles of cadavera of forty-nine patients--twenty-four men and twenty-five women--who died between the ages of sixty and ninety-eight years were measured directly and on radiographs. The pedicles of lumbar vertebrae from fifty-one patients--twenty-three men and twenty-eight women--between the ages of twenty and fifty years who had low-back problems were measured on radiographs and computerized tomographic scans. Comparison revealed that the average transverse and sagittal diameters of the pedicles and the distance from the posterior aspect of the laminar cortex to the anterior aspect of the cortex of the vertebral body along the central axis of the pedicles were 5 to 20 per cent greater in men, but the transverse and sagittal angles of the pedicle did not differ significantly between the sexes. Measurements on radiographs and computerized tomographic scans of the transverse angles of the pedicles and of the distances from the posterior aspect of the laminar cortex to the anterior aspect of the cortex of the vertebral body from the second to the fifth lumbar vertebra were greater than direct measurements, even without magnification. Direct measurements of the diameters of the transverse and sagittal diameters of the pedicle of the fifth lumbar vertebra, however, were greater than the radiographic measurements.
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