The Relationship Between Lumbar Lateral Listhesis and Radiculopathy in Adult Scoliosis. Spine Kleimeyer, J. P., Liu, N. n., Hu, S. S., Cheng, I. n., Alamin, T. n., Grottkau, B. E., Kukreja, S. n., Wood, K. B. 2019; 44 (14): 1003–9

Abstract

Retrospective review and prospective validation study.To develop a classification system of lumbar lateral listhesis that suggests different likelihoods of having radiculopathy in adult scoliosis.The association of lumbar lateral listhesis with radiculopathy remains uncertain.A retrospective cohort of patients with adult scoliosis enrolled from 2011 to 2015 was studied to develop a classification system of lateral listhesis that can stratify the likelihood of having radiculopathy. Four radiological aspects of lateral listhesis, including Nash and Moe vertebral rotation, L4-L5 lateral listhesis, the number of consecutive listheses, and the presence of a contralateral lateral listhesis at the thoracolumbar junction above a caudal listhesis, were evaluated on radiographs. Their associations with the presence of radicular leg pain were evaluated using multivariable logistic regression. The classification system of lateral listhesis was thus developed using the most influential radiological factors and then validated in a prospective cohort from 2016 to 2017.The retrospective cohort included 189 patients. Vertebral rotation is more than or equal to grade 2 (odds ratio [OR]?=?9.45, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 4.07-25.14) and L4-5 listhesis (OR?=?4.56, 95%CI: 1.85-12.35) were the two most influential listhesis factors associated with radiculopathy. The classification system of lateral listhesis was thus built based on the combinations of their respective presence: Type 0, 1, 2, 3 were defined as not having listhesis at all, none of the two factors present, one of the two presents, and both present, respectively. This classification significantly stratified the probability of radiculopathy, in both the retrospective cohort (0%, 6.4%, 33.8%, and 68.4% in Type 0, 1, 2, and 3, respectively; P?

View details for DOI 10.1097/BRS.0000000000002986

View details for PubMedID 30664100