Lumbar disc space height in relation to neural foraminal dimensions and patient characteristics: A morphometric analysis from L1-S1 using computed tomography.
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2025-01
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Abstract
Introduction
The normative relationship between lumbar intervertebral disc space height (DSH) and neuroforaminal dimensions (NFD) has yet to be defined.Research question
The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between lumbar DSH and NFD using computed tomography (CT), accounting for influences of patient demographic and anthropometric characteristics.Materials and methods
We analyzed CT imaging of 350 female and 350 male patients. Anterior, middle, and posterior DSH were measured. NFD were defined as sagittal anterior-to-posterior (AP) width, axial AP width, foraminal height, and area. Statistical analyses were performed to assess associations among DSH, NFD, and patient height, weight, body mass index, sex, and ethnicity.Results
Irrespective of disc level, mean anterior, middle, and posterior DSH were 7.98 mm (n = 3500), 8.16 mm (n = 3500), and 4.09 mm (n = 3500). DSH measurements demonstrated increasing, linear trends moving caudally from L1-L2 to L5-S1, while NFD demonstrated a unimodal distribution pattern with largest NFD at L3-L4 and smallest NFD at L1-2 and L5-S1. Male patients demonstrated larger DSH compared to female patients from L1-S1. Asian patients demonstrated taller DSH across all levels L1-S1.Discussion and conclusion
This study describes 38,500 CT-based L1-S1 DSH and NFD in young patients without spinal pathology. DSH follows an increasing trend moving caudally from L1-S1, while NFD demonstrate a unimodal distribution clustered at L3-L4. NFD are not moderately or strongly associated with DSH. DSH is influenced by sex and ethnicity but is not moderately or strongly influenced by patient height, weight, and BMI.Type
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Shin, David, Ethan Vyhmeister, Daniel Im, Andrew Fay, Owen Faehner, Andrew Cabrera, Alexander Bouterse, Lauren Seo, et al. (2025). Lumbar disc space height in relation to neural foraminal dimensions and patient characteristics: A morphometric analysis from L1-S1 using computed tomography. Brain & spine, 5. p. 104162. 10.1016/j.bas.2024.104162 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/33970.
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Olumide Ayodele Danisa
I am an academic board-certified spine surgeon with more than 25 years of experience treating spine disease. I address a variety of spinal conditions, including upper cervical instability; cervical degenerative and traumatic disease; thoracic disease and deformity; lumbar degeneration and instability; spinal trauma (cervical, thoracic, and lumbosacral); metastatic spine disease; spinal infections; and complex spine conditions. In surgery, I use traditional open techniques, minimally invasive spine surgery, and endoscopic spine surgery.
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