Vietnamese
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Spine 2000-Nov

Inflammatory cells, motor weakness, and straight leg raising in transligamentous disc herniations.

Chỉ người dùng đã đăng ký mới có thể dịch các bài báo
Đăng nhập Đăng ký
Liên kết được lưu vào khay nhớ tạm
M Grönblad
J Virri
S Seitsalo
A Habtemariam
E Karaharju

Từ khóa

trừu tượng

METHODS

Possible statistically significant relationships between inflammatory cells and either motor weakness or straight leg raising were determined.

OBJECTIVE

To look for any clinically relevant links between inflammatory cells in disc herniations and signs of radiculopathy.

BACKGROUND

Many studies have during recent years shown a presence of various types of inflammatory cells in disc herniations, but their clinical relevance has been questioned. To be clinically relevant, a presence of inflammatory cells should show a clear relationship to clinical evidence of nerve root involvement. Macrophages repeatedly demonstrated in a high proportion of disc herniations studied are of particular interest. Their major role may be in disc herniations tissue resorption and not in sciatica.

METHODS

A total of 96 disc herniations, all transligamentous, were analyzed by immunohistochemistry for presence of macrophages, T or B lymphocytes, and activated T lymphocytes separately. From recorded patient data, motor weakness and straight leg raising data were compared with a presence or absence of abundant (+ = at least 20 cells in a group) inflammatory cells. When not abundant, inflammatory cells were classified as "only few cells" (+) and grouped together with "no cells" (-). Patients with or without motor weakness were compared. Straight leg raising was compared for a positive (at <70 degrees ) or a negative test, and separately using the median as cut-off value. Groups were compared by chi-square analysis with the level of statistical significance set at P<0.05.

RESULTS

None of the four inflammatory cell types showed any significant association with motor weakness. Nor was any association observed when comparing positive and negative straight leg raising. With the median (straight leg raising = 47.5 degrees ) as cut-off, only activated T cells showed a weak (chi2 = 4.40, P<0.05) relationship with tighter straight leg raising, but none of the other cell types did. Even when straight leg raising was < 47.5 degrees, three times more disc herniations lacked (n = 34) inflammatory cells than showed (n = 13) inflammation. In a subgroup of only sequestrated discs, the findings were similar. However, in the patients with a bilaterally positive straight leg raising (n = 25), the prevalence of at least one inflammatory cell type was much higher in sequestrated discs (80%) than in extrusions (33%). This may suggest more subtle interrelationships between type of disc herniation, straight leg raising, and inflammatory cells.

CONCLUSIONS

The results of this study do not support a clinically relevant role for disc herniation inflammatory cells in sciatica. For the cells to be clinically relevant, a strong relationship between a presence of inflammatory cells and either or both of motor weakness and a tight straight leg raising should have been observed. The authors conclude that macrophages, which have been demonstrated in a high proportion of disc herniations in previous studies, are probably more important for disc tissue resorption processes than for producing sciatica. Other types of inflammatory cells are more rarely observed and may have no clinical meaning at all. However, more subtle interrelationships, considering the various types of disc herniations, should be further explored.

Tham gia trang
facebook của chúng tôi

Cơ sở dữ liệu đầy đủ nhất về dược liệu được hỗ trợ bởi khoa học

  • Hoạt động bằng 55 ngôn ngữ
  • Phương pháp chữa bệnh bằng thảo dược được hỗ trợ bởi khoa học
  • Nhận dạng các loại thảo mộc bằng hình ảnh
  • Bản đồ GPS tương tác - gắn thẻ các loại thảo mộc vào vị trí (sắp ra mắt)
  • Đọc các ấn phẩm khoa học liên quan đến tìm kiếm của bạn
  • Tìm kiếm dược liệu theo tác dụng của chúng
  • Sắp xếp sở thích của bạn và cập nhật các nghiên cứu tin tức, thử nghiệm lâm sàng và bằng sáng chế

Nhập một triệu chứng hoặc một căn bệnh và đọc về các loại thảo mộc có thể hữu ích, nhập một loại thảo mộc và xem các bệnh và triệu chứng mà nó được sử dụng để chống lại.
* Tất cả thông tin dựa trên nghiên cứu khoa học đã được công bố

Google Play badgeApp Store badge