2009
DOI: 10.1007/s00701-009-0244-2
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Two brothers with a symptomatic thoracic disc herniation at T11–T12: clinical report

Abstract: Background In contrast to what is commonly believed, thoracic disc herniations are not rare lesions.

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Cited by 14 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…In the adult population, the incidence of symptomatic TDHs has been estimated at 1/1.000.000 [10] [12] [15] but may actually be higher considering a prevalence of 37% on MR imaging in asymptomatic individuals [20]. The incidence of symptomatic TLJDHs is essentially unknown as these have rarely been analyzed as a separate clinical entity [ to 83 years, and involved level from T2-T3 to T12-L1, including 35 (9.8%) TMDs at T10-T11, 52 (14.2%) at T11-T12, and 9 (2.5%) at T12-L1.…”
Section: Incidence and Clinical Presentation Of Tljdhsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In the adult population, the incidence of symptomatic TDHs has been estimated at 1/1.000.000 [10] [12] [15] but may actually be higher considering a prevalence of 37% on MR imaging in asymptomatic individuals [20]. The incidence of symptomatic TLJDHs is essentially unknown as these have rarely been analyzed as a separate clinical entity [ to 83 years, and involved level from T2-T3 to T12-L1, including 35 (9.8%) TMDs at T10-T11, 52 (14.2%) at T11-T12, and 9 (2.5%) at T12-L1.…”
Section: Incidence and Clinical Presentation Of Tljdhsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the pediatric population, there are merely case reports of symptomatic TDHs [6] [16]- [18], including one 16-year-old girl with a T10-T11 disc herniation at the upper limit of the TLJ [8]. These TDHs (especially when calcified and/or associated with Scheuermann's disease) may be related to a growth disturbance rather than to disc degeneration [12] [23]. They may be underdiagnosed because they are not included in the differential diag-nosis.…”
Section: Incidence and Clinical Presentation Of Tljdhsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Variability in the size and form (shape 1 size) of the spinal canal, or neural foramen, and the vertebral body has been the subject of many clinical and paleopathological studies, as it has been associated with conditions such as acquired and developmental spinal stenosis, scoliosis, and spondylolysis (clinical literature: Inufusa et al, 1996;Harrington et al, 2001;Masharawi, 2008Masharawi, , 2012Meijer et al, 2010;Abbas et al, 2010;paleopathological literature: Clark et al, 1986;Watts, 2010). Schmorl's nodes are a relatively common spinal pathology in both clinical and archaeological contexts (clinical literature: Dar et al, 2009;Overvliet et al, 2009;Jang et al, 2010;paleopathological literature: Š laus, 2000;Ü stü ndag , 2009;Klaus et al, 2009). Clinically, herniation of the intervertebral disc shows little correlation with a patient's age, but discs with adjacent Schmorl's nodes can display degenerative changes earlier than those without (Adams et al, 2000).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While TDHs are most commonly present in the setting of trauma (either external trauma or microtrauma in the setting of physiological movement making up 49% of all causes of TDHs [ 3 ]), a subset of TDHs can be seen with other associated conditions such as Scheuermann’s disease in the pediatric population, hereditary connective tissue disorders such as Ehlers-Danlos syndromes or Marfan syndrome, smoking, congenital stenosis, obesity, and those with sedentary lifestyles [ 4 ]. Rarely, spontaneous cases have been reported such as a case where two brothers aged 32 and 34 both had TDHs with no other predetermined risk factors suggesting an underlying genetic predisposition [ 4 ]. Our patient had no inciting trauma, but tobacco and underlying congenital stenosis were identified as risk factors that likely contributed to disc degeneration and acute presentation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%