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Spine Deformity 2015-Jul

Body Mass Index in Adolescent Spinal Deformity: Comparison of Scheuermann's Kyphosis, Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis, and Normal Controls.

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Baron S Lonner
Courtney S Toombs
Qasim M Husain
Paul Sponseller
Harry Shufflebarger
Suken A Shah
Amer F Samdani
Randal R Betz
Patrick J Cahill
Burt Yaszay

Mots clés

Abstrait

METHODS

Prospective, multicenter study of Scheuermann's kyphosis (SK) and adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) compared to a control group.

OBJECTIVE

Compare body mass index (BMI) and Scoliosis Research Society Questionnaire-22 (SRS-22) scores among two diagnosis and one control group.

BACKGROUND

BMI has been reported as increased in SK patients; however, there are few recent data on this subject or comparing SK to AIS.

METHODS

Ninety-two SK patients (37 female, 55 male, average age 16 years), 1,051 AIS patients (814 female, 237 male, average age 15 years), and 380 adolescents without scoliosis (controls) were compared based on age, gender, race, height (m), weight (kg), BMI, and SRS-22 scores. An analysis of variance was used to test differences in BMI and SRS-22 scores between the groups and between males and females. Pearson correlations determined the relationship between AIS T5-T12 kyphosis and BMI, SK max kyphosis and BMI, and to determine the relationship between BMI and SRS-22 scores in each group.

RESULTS

More SK patients were "obese" and "overweight" (28% and 22%) compared to the AIS (6% and 9%) and Control groups (5.8% and 17.9%) (p < .001). More AIS patients were "underweight" (27%, SK: 13%, Control: 12.1%; p < .03). T5-T12 kyphosis was weakly correlated with BMI (r = 0.17), whereas max kyphosis correlated well with BMI (r = 0.39, p < .00). The SK group had significantly lower (worse) SRS-22 scores than AIS patients in the Pain (3.97 vs. 4.10), Self-Image (2.86 vs. 3.35), Mental Health (3.72 vs. 4.02), and Total Score domains (3.62 vs. 3.92, p < .001). Increased pain scores were weakly correlated with decreasing BMI in all three groups.

CONCLUSIONS

SK patients are at increased risk for elevated BMI and worse SRS-22 scores, indicating that they may suffer from delayed diagnosis and increased surgical complications. AIS patients are at increased risk for issues related to low BMI and should also be monitored.

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