RESUMEN
Schmorl's nodes are depressions on vertebrae due to herniation of the nucleus pulposus of the intervertebral disc into the vertebral body. This study provides an extension of our previous study which analyzed the shape of the lower thoracic spine and found that vertebral morphology was associated with the presence of Schmorl's nodes. Ninety adult individuals from the late Medieval site of Fishergate House, York, and the Post-Medieval site of Coach Lane, North Shields, Tyne and Wear, England, were analysed using 2D geometric morphometrics to identify possible relationships between vertebral morphology and Schmorl's nodes at the thoraco-lumbar junction and in the lumbar spine. A significant correlation was found between vertebral shape and the presence of Schmorl's nodes in the twelfth thoracic vertebrae and the first to third lumbar vertebrae. The findings corroborate previous studies and suggest that vertebral shape may be an important factor in spinal health. It is hypothesized that the pedicle shape of affected vertebrae may not provide adequate structural support for the vertebral bodies, resulting in vertical disc herniation.
Asunto(s)
Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/patología , Columna Vertebral/patología , Adulto , Inglaterra , Femenino , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia Medieval , Humanos , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , PaleopatologíaRESUMEN
In ancient times, a supernatural understanding of the syndrome of lumbar radiculopathy often involved demonic forces vexing the individual with often crippling pain. The ancient Greeks and Egyptians began to take a more naturalistic view and, critically, suspected a relationship between lumbar spinal pathology and leg symptoms. Relatively little then changed for those with sciatica until the classic works by Cotugno and Kocher arrived in the late 18th century. Early lumbar canal explorations were performed in the late 1800s and early 1900s by MacEwen, Horsley, Krause, Taylor, Dandy, and Cushing, among others. In these cases, when compressive pathologies were found and removed, the lesions typically were (mis-)identified as enchondromas or osteochondritis dissecans. To better understand the history, learn more about the first treatments of lumbar disc herniation, and evaluate the impact of the early influences on modern spine practice, searches of PubMed and Embase were performed using the search terms discectomy, medical history, lumbar spine surgery, herniated disc, herniated nucleus pulposus, sciatica, and lumbar radiculopathy. Additional sources were identified from the reference lists of the reviewed papers. Many older and ancient sources including De Ischiade Nervosa are available in English translations and were used. When full texts were not available, English abstracts were used. The first true, intentional discectomy surgery was performed by Mixter and Barr in 1932. Early on, a transdural approach was favored. In 1938, Love described the intralaminar, extradural approach. His technique, although modified with improved lighting, magnification, and retractors, remains a staple approach to disc herniations today. Other modalities such as chymopapain have been investigated. Some remain a part of the therapeutic armamentarium, whereas others have disappeared. By the 1970s, CT scanning after myelography markedly improved the clinical evaluation of patients with lumbar disc herniation. In this era, use of discectomy surgery increased rapidly. Even patients with very early symptoms were offered surgery. Later work, especially by Weber and Hakelius, showed that many patients with lumbar disc herniation would improve without surgical intervention. In the ensuing decades, the debate over operative indications and timing continued, reaching another pivotal moment with the 2006 publication of the initial results of Spine Patient Outcomes Research Trial.
Asunto(s)
Discectomía/historia , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Disco Intervertebral , Vértebras Lumbares , Historia del Siglo XV , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia Antigua , Humanos , Disco Intervertebral/fisiopatología , Disco Intervertebral/cirugía , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/fisiopatología , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/cirugía , Vértebras Lumbares/fisiopatología , Vértebras Lumbares/cirugía , Resultado del TratamientoRESUMEN
Today, lumbar disc disease is a very common disease, which will be often seen in both the family practice as well as in the consultations of orthopedics, neurology, rheumatology or neurosurgery. Furthermore, lumbar disc surgery is one of the most common spinal surgical procedures worldwide. But, for many centuries, physician had no clear understanding of the anatomical condition and the pathomechanism of this disease. Therefore, no rational treatment was available. The Hippocratic physicians knew the signs and symptoms of lumbar disc disease, which they then called "sciatica". But, they subsumed different disorders, like hip diseases under this term. In the mid-18th century, it was the Italian physician Domenico Felice Antonio Cotugno (1736-1822), who first brought clarity in the concept of radicular syndromes; he recognized, that the so-called "sciatica" could be of neurogenic origin. In 1742, a contemporary of Cotugno, the German Josias Weitbrecht (1702-1747) has to be credited for the first precise description of the intervertebral disc. Nearby a hundred years later, the German Hubert von Luschka (1820-1875) described for the first time a herniated disc in a pathologic specimen. With the landmark report of the New England Journal of Medicine in 1934, the two American surgeons, William Jason Mixter (1880-1958) and Joseph Seaton Barr (1901-1963), finally cleared the pathomechanism of lumbar disc disease.
Asunto(s)
Degeneración del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Dolor de la Región Lumbar/historia , Ortopedia/historia , Radiculopatía/historia , Ciática/historia , Historia del Siglo XV , Historia del Siglo XVI , Historia del Siglo XVII , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Historia Antigua , Historia Medieval , HumanosRESUMEN
In ancient times as well as in the Middle Ages treatment options for discogenic nerve compression syndrome were limited and usually not very specific because of low anatomical and pathophysiological knowledge. The stretch rack (scamnum Hippocratis) was particularly prominent but was widely used as a therapeutic device for very different spinal disorders. Since the beginning of the nineteenth century anatomical knowledge increased and the advances in the fields of asepsis, anesthesia and surgery resulted in an increase in surgical interventions on the spine. In 1908 the first successful lumbar discectomy was initiated and performed by the German neurologist Heinrich O. Oppenheim (1858-1919) and the surgeon Fedor Krause (1857-1937); however, neither recognized the true pathological condition of discogenic nerve compression syndrome. With the landmark report in the New England Journal of Medicine in 1934, the two American surgeons William Jason Mixter (1880-1958) and Joseph Seaton Barr (1901-1963) finally clarified the pathomechanism of lumbar disc herniation and furthermore, propagated discectomy as the standard therapy. Since then interventions on intervertebral discs rapidly increased and the treatment options for lumbar disc surgery quickly evolved. The surgical procedures changed over time and were continuously being refined. In the late 1960s the surgical microscope was introduced for spinal surgery by the work of the famous neurosurgeon Mahmut Gazi Yasargil and his colleague Wolfhard Caspar and so-called microdiscectomy was introduced. Besides open discectomy other interventional techniques were developed to overcome the side effects of surgical procedures. In 1964 the American orthopedic surgeon Lyman Smith (1912-1991) introduced chemonucleolysis, a minimally invasive technique consisting only of a cannula and the proteolytic enzyme chymopapain, which is injected into the disc compartment to dissolve the displaced disc material. In 1975 the Japanese orthopedic surgeon Sadahisa Hijikata described percutaneous discectomy for the first time, which was a further minimally invasive surgical technique. Further variants of minimally invasive surgical procedures, such as percutaneous laser discectomy in 1986 and percutaneous endoscopic microdiscectomy in 1997, were also introduced; however, open discectomy, especially microdiscectomy remains the therapeutic gold standard for lumbar disc herniation.
Asunto(s)
Discectomía/historia , Degeneración del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Dolor de la Región Lumbar/historia , Radiculopatía/historia , Ciática/historia , Tracción/historia , Alemania , Historia del Siglo XV , Historia del Siglo XVI , Historia del Siglo XVII , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Historia Antigua , Historia Medieval , Humanos , Dolor de la Región Lumbar/prevención & control , Síndromes de Compresión Nerviosa/historia , Síndromes de Compresión Nerviosa/terapia , Ortopedia/historia , Radiculopatía/prevención & control , Ciática/cirugíaRESUMEN
Schmorl's nodes are the result of herniations of the nucleus pulposus into the adjacent vertebral body and are commonly identified in both clinical and archaeological contexts. The current study aims to identify aspects of vertebral shape that correlate with Schmorl's nodes. Two-dimensional statistical shape analysis was performed on digital images of the lower thoracic spine (T10-T12) of adult skeletons from the late medieval skeletal assemblages from Fishergate House, York, St. Mary Graces and East Smithfield Black Death cemeteries, London, and postmedieval Chelsea Old Church, London. Schmorl's nodes were scored on the basis of their location, depth, and size. Results indicate that there is a correlation between the shape of the posterior margin of the vertebral body and pedicles and the presence of Schmorl's nodes in the lower thoracic spine. The size of the vertebral body in males was also found to correlate with the lesions. Vertebral shape differences associated with the macroscopic characteristics of Schmorl's nodes, indicating severity of the lesion, were also analyzed. The shape of the pedicles and the posterior margin of the vertebral body, along with a larger vertebral body size in males, have a strong association with both the presence and severity of Schmorl's nodes. This suggests that shape and/or size of these vertebral components are predisposing to, or resulting in, vertically directed disc herniation.
Asunto(s)
Degeneración del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Degeneración del Disco Intervertebral/patología , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/patología , Vértebras Torácicas/anatomía & histología , Vértebras Torácicas/patología , Adulto , Análisis de Varianza , Cementerios , Femenino , Historia Medieval , Humanos , Londres , Masculino , Paleopatología , Análisis de Componente Principal , Factores SexualesRESUMEN
Removal of a herniated disc with the use of the operative microscope was first performed by Yasargil (Adv Neurosurg. 4:81-2, 1977) in 1977. However, it began to be used more and more only in the late 1980s (McCulloch JA (1989) Principles of microsurgery for lumbar disc disease. Raven Press, New York). In the 1990s, many spinal surgeons abandoned conventional discectomy with naked-eye to pass to the routine practice of microdiscectomy. The merits of this technique are that it allows every type of disc herniation to be excised through a short approach to skin, fascia and muscles as well as a limited laminoarthrectomy. For these reasons, it has been, and still is, considered the "gold standard" of surgical treatment for lumbar disc herniation, and the method used by the vast majority of spinal surgeons. In the 1990s, the advent of MRI and the progressive increase in definition of this modality of imaging, as well as histopathologic and immunochemical studies of disc tissue and the analysis of the results of conservative treatments have considerably contributed to the knowledge of the natural evolution of a herniated disc. It was shown that disc herniation may decrease in size or disappear in a few weeks or months. Since the second half of the 1990s there has been a revival of percutaneous procedures. Some of these are similar to the percutaneous automated nucleotomy; other methods are represented by intradiscal injection of a mixture of "oxygen-ozone" (Alexandre A, Buric J, Paradiso R. et al. (2001) Intradiscal injection of oxygen ozone for the treatment of lumbar disc herniations: result at 5 years. 12th World Congress of Neurosurgery; 284-7), or laserdiscectomy performed under CT scan (Menchetti PPM. (2006) Laser Med Sci. 4:25-7). The really emerging procedure is that using an endoscope inserted into the disc through the intervertebral foramen to visualize the herniation and remove it manually using thin pituitary rongeurs, a radiofrequency probe or both (Chiu JC. (2004) Surg Technol Int. 13:276-86).Microdiscectomy is still the standard method of treatment due to its simplicity, low rate of complications and high percentage of satisfactory results, which exceed 90% in the largest series. Endoscopic transforaminal discectomy appears to be a reliable method, able to give similar results to microdiscectomy, provided the surgeon is expert enough in the technique, which implies a long learning curve in order to perform the operation effectively, with no complications. All the non-endoscopic percutaneous procedures now available can be used, but the patient must be clearly informed that while the procedure is simple and rapid, at least for the disc L4-L5 and those above (except for laserdiscectomy under CT, that can be easily performed also at L5-S1), their success rate ranges from 60 to 70% and that, in many cases, pain may decrease slowly and may take even several weeks to disappear.
Asunto(s)
Discectomía Percutánea/historia , Discectomía Percutánea/métodos , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/cirugía , Microcirugia/métodos , Discectomía Percutánea/tendencias , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia del Siglo XXI , Humanos , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Región Lumbosacra/cirugía , Microcirugia/historia , Microcirugia/tendenciasRESUMEN
In 1961, President John F. Kennedy declared that the United States would send a man to the moon and safely bring him home before the end of the decade. Astronaut Michael Collins was one of those men. He flew to the moon on the historic flight of Apollo 11 while Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on its surface. However, this was not supposed to be the case.Astronaut Collins was scheduled to fly on Apollo 8. While training, in 1968, he started developing symptoms of cervical myelopathy. He underwent evaluation at Wilford Hall Air Force Hospital in San Antonio and was noted to have a C5-6 disc herniation and posterior osteophyte on myelography. Air Force Lieutenant General (Dr.) Paul W. Myers performed an anterior cervical discectomy with placement of iliac bone graft. As a result, Astronaut James Lovell took his place on Apollo 8 flying the uncertain and daring first mission to the moon. This had a cascading effect on the rotation of astronauts, placing Michael Collins on the Apollo 11 flight that first landed men on the moon. It also placed Astronaut James Lovell in a rotation that exposed him to be the Commander of the fateful Apollo 13 flight.Here, the authors chronicle the history of Astronaut Collins' anterior cervical surgery and the impact of his procedure on the rotation of astronaut flight selection, and they review the pivotal historic nature of the Apollo 8 spaceflight. The authors further discuss the ongoing issue of cervical disc herniation among astronauts.
Asunto(s)
Astronautas , Vértebras Cervicales/cirugía , Personajes , Vuelo Espacial/historia , Fusión Vertebral/historia , Adulto , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/etiología , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/cirugía , Masculino , Enfermedades de la Médula Espinal/etiología , Enfermedades de la Médula Espinal/historia , Enfermedades de la Médula Espinal/cirugía , Estados UnidosRESUMEN
Sex and temporal differences are assessed in relation to dietary habits and activity patterns in three ancient populations from Corinth, Greece. The skeletal sample spans time from the Geometric to the Early Byzantine Period (9th c. BCE-5th c. CE). Dental caries and tooth wear have been proven to be reliable dietary indicators. Similarly, spinal osteoarthritis, spinal facet remodeling and Schmorl's nodes, have been used to infer activity patterns.
Asunto(s)
Caries Dental/historia , Dieta/historia , Caracteres Sexuales , Desgaste de los Dientes/historia , Remodelación Ósea , Ejercicio Físico , Femenino , Fósiles , Grecia , Historia Antigua , Humanos , Degeneración del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Masculino , Osteoartritis/historia , Paleodontología , PaleopatologíaRESUMEN
INTRODUCTION: Artificial disc replacements, which serve the function of separating vertebrae to allow for proper spinal alignment, can help treat debilitating low back pain in patients who have failed other conservative methods of treatment. A Swedish surgeon, Ulf Fernström, was the pioneer of artificial disc replacement, and his contribution in the form of Fernström balls dramatically altered spinal surgery and technique by showing the proper technique and implant that should be used for areas requiring motion in many planes. HISTORY OF THE ARTIFICIAL DISC: Ulf Fernström created his artificial disc inspired by the movement of the hip and knee joints. His implants attempted to restore disc spacing and articulation in patients who had failed conservative measures of treatment. Fernström balls were the first implants of their kind and represent the first attempt at artificial disc replacement. However, many surgeons and researchers questioned Fernström balls, claiming that their lack of elastic properties could damage patients. CONCLUSIONS: Of the wide range of implants on the market for the intervertebral disc space, all designs and applications of products stem from the initial discovery made by Fernström, thus making him a pioneer in disc replacement.
Asunto(s)
Neurocirujanos/historia , Prótesis e Implantes/historia , Reeemplazo Total de Disco/historia , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Disco Intervertebral/diagnóstico por imagen , Disco Intervertebral/cirugía , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/diagnóstico por imagen , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/cirugía , Reeemplazo Total de Disco/instrumentaciónRESUMEN
This article presents the evolution in medical history which leads to the surgical treatment for ruptured discs. Only at the last century the precise diagnosis of a ruptured lumbar disc could be made after tremendous efforts of the many medical pioneers in the study of the spine. The experience gained with the lumbar spine was rapidly transferred to the cervical spine. We describe the evolution of the clinical and surgical aspects about ruptured discs in the lumbar and cervical spine. An illustrative timeline of the major events regarding the surgical treatment for ruptured disks is outlined in a straight forward manner. Our understandings of the relation between symptoms and signs and of that between anatomy and pathophysiology have led to more successful surgical treatment for this disease. Nowadays lumbar and cervical discectomies are the most frequent operations carried out by neurosurgeons. Our current care of patients with this kind of spinal disorders is based on the work of our ancient medical heroes.
Asunto(s)
Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Procedimientos Ortopédicos/historia , Vértebras Cervicales/cirugía , Historia del Siglo XVI , Historia del Siglo XVII , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia Antigua , Historia Medieval , Humanos , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/cirugía , Vértebras Lumbares/cirugíaRESUMEN
William Jason Mixter was born in 1880 and graduated from the Harvard Medical School class of 1906. Like his father, Mixter was a prominent surgeon at the Massachusetts General Hospital, and in 1911 the two shared the job of overseeing all neurosurgery at that institution. By the early 1930s, W. J. Mixter was considered to be one of the nation's leading experts in spinal surgery, and he went on to become the first chief of the neurosurgery department at Massachusetts General Hospital. He served in the U. S. Army in both world wars and was actively involved in his local church community in Boston for many years. In 1934, at the age of 54, Mixter and Joseph S. Barr published an article on the intervertebral disc lesion in the New England Journal of Medicine. That article fundamentally changed the popular understanding of sciatica at that time, and for this work Mixter is generally credited by his contemporaries as being the man who best clarified the relation between the intervertebral disc and sciatica. Mixter and Barr's landmark report helped to establish surgery's prominent role in the management of sciatica at the time. Over the next few decades, discectomy surgery increased in popularity tremendously, and some refer to that period as the "dynasty of the disc."
Asunto(s)
Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Neurocirugia/historia , Ciática/historia , Austria , Boston , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , HumanosRESUMEN
The history of surgery for ruptured disk of the human spine began approximately a century ago. Advances in the understanding of symptoms and signs of root or cord compression, their relationship to the pathology, and the refinement in imaging techniques have contributed to the present surgical management of rupture disk disease. Historical findings relevant to the cervical, thoracic, and lumbosacral regions of the spine, with relevant pathophysiology, imaging, and surgical treatment, including the evolution of various surgical approaches are discussed. Surgeons and other contributors in the medical field are cited for their respective contributions to the evolution of the present operative approaches for disk ruptures in the cervical, thoracic, and lumbar spinal regions.
Asunto(s)
Discectomía/historia , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Endoscopía/historia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/fisiopatología , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/cirugíaRESUMEN
In this paper past, present, and future treatments of degenerative disc disease (DDD) of the lumbar spine are outlined in a straight forward manner. This is done to review previous knowledge of the disease, define current treatment procedures, and discuss future perspectives. An analysis of a subject of this magnitude dictates that one describes as accurate a history as possible: an anatomical/historical "tract" with emphasis on all possible deviations. Although spinal disorders have been recognized for a long time, the view of DDD as a particular disease entity is a more recent development. In this paper, the authors attempt to outline the history of DDD of the lumbar spine in an unbiased and scientific fashion. Physiological, diagnostic, and therapeutic implications will all be addressed in this study.
Asunto(s)
Discectomía/historia , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Disco Intervertebral/patología , Vértebras Lumbares , Neurocirugia/historia , Ortopedia/historia , Fusión Vertebral/historia , Mundo Árabe , Dolor de Espalda/etiología , Dolor de Espalda/historia , Dolor de Espalda/terapia , Diagnóstico por Imagen/historia , Progresión de la Enfermedad , Egipto , Europa (Continente) , Predicción , Historia del Siglo XVI , Historia del Siglo XVII , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Historia Medieval , Humanos , Fijadores Internos/historia , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/complicaciones , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/diagnóstico , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/cirugía , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/terapia , Vértebras Lumbares/patología , Vértebras Lumbares/cirugía , Neurocirugia/métodos , Procedimientos Neuroquirúrgicos/historia , Procedimientos Neuroquirúrgicos/instrumentación , Procedimientos Ortopédicos/historia , Procedimientos Ortopédicos/instrumentación , Ortopedia/métodos , Prótesis e Implantes/historia , Ciática/etiología , Ciática/historia , Ciática/terapia , Fusión Vertebral/instrumentaciónRESUMEN
Lumbar disc herniation is one of the most common causes of low back pain and/or sciatica. However, the pathogenesis of lumbar disc herniation, low back pain, and sciatica has not been fully understood. Inflammation in nerve root and dorsal root ganglia induced by nucleus pulposus may play an important role in the pathogenesis of spinal pain. I reviewed the basic and update papers regarding lumbar disc herniation. Herniated nucleus pulposus had been considered an enchondroma occurred from intervertebral disc, historically. At present, however, it is emphasized that nucleus pulposus has an inflammatogenic properties to affect the nerve root function, structure, vascular permeability, and pain.
Asunto(s)
Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/etiología , Ganglios Espinales/fisiopatología , Historia del Siglo XVII , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Inflamación/etiología , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Dolor de la Región Lumbar/etiología , Dolor de la Región Lumbar/historia , Ciática/etiología , Ciática/historiaRESUMEN
Although the clinical picture of discogenic sciatica is well known already in the ancient world, it is not until 1933 that WJ Mixter and JS Barr provide the correct pathogenetic interpretation and suggest surgery as the treatment of choice. The work of the American Authors was however based on the knowledge acquired during the previous centuries starting with Domenico Cotugno, who first suggested the neurogenic nature of sciatica (1764) and later with the neurologists of the french school Valleix, Lasègue, Dejerine, Sicard who elucidated the semeiology and debated in detail the etiopathogenesis of the condition. The german pathologists Schmorl and Andrae (1927-29) are to be credited for their contribution to the pathology of intervertebral disc, recognizing the frequency and degenerative (not neoplastic) nature of nucleus pulposus herniation. Surgery of disc herniation starts with Oppenheim and Krause (1909). Mixter and Barr used laminectomy and a transdural route although a more limited approach to the spinal canal had already been proposed by the italian Bonomo (1902), unknown to many. Love, of the Mayo Clinic (1937-39) introduced the extradural/interlaminar approach while Caspar and Yasargil (1977) applied the concepts of microsurgery to the procedure. The latest advances are represented by percutaneous and endoscopic techniques.
Asunto(s)
Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/cirugía , Vértebras Lumbares , Neurocirugia/historia , Ciática/historia , Animales , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Quimiólisis del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/complicaciones , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Laminectomía/historia , Conejos , Ciática/etiologíaRESUMEN
It is not more than sixty years ago that a relationship between rupture of an intervertebral disk and possible involvement of the spinal canal with its nervous structures had first been established. However, our knowledge of the intervertebral disk on the one hand, and of myelo- and radiculopathies on the other, is much older. Some of the steps leading to the 'discovery' of disk herniation are pointed out and illustrated.
Asunto(s)
Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Dolor de Espalda/historia , Europa (Continente) , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Disco Intervertebral/anatomía & histología , Neuralgia/historia , Columna Vertebral/anatomía & histologíaRESUMEN
The understanding of lumbar spine pathologies made substantial progress at the turn of the twentieth century. The authors review the original publication of Otto Veraguth in 1929 reporting on the successful resection of a herniated lumbar disc, published exclusively in the German language. His early report is put into the historical context, and its impact on the understanding of pathologies of the intervertebral disc (IVD) is estimated. The Swiss surgeon and Nobel Prize laureate Emil Theodor Kocher was among the first physicians to describe the traumatic rupture of the IVD in 1896. As early as 1909 Oppenheim and Krause published 2 case reports on surgery for a herniated lumbar disc. Goldthwait was the first physician to delineate the etiopathogenes is between annulus rupture, symptoms of sciatica, and neurological signs in his publication of 1911. Further publications by Middleton and Teacher in 1911 and Schmorl in 1929 added to the understanding of lumbar spinal pathologies. In 1929, the Swiss neurologist Veraguth (surgery performed by Hans Brun) and the American neurosurgeon Walter Edward Dandy both published their early experiences with the surgical therapy of a herniated lumbar disc. Veraguth's contribution, however, has not been appreciated internationally to date. The causal relationship between lumbar disc pathology and sciatica remained uncertain for some years to come. The causal relationship was not confirmed until Mixter and Barr's landmark paper in 1934 describing the association of sciatica and lumbar disc herniation, after which the surgical treatment became increasingly popular. Veraguth was among the first physicians to report on the clinical course of a patient with successful resection of a herniated lumbar disc. His observations should be acknowledged in view of the limited experience and literature on this ailment at that time.
Asunto(s)
Degeneración del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Procedimientos Ortopédicos/historia , Ortopedia/historia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Vértebras Lumbares/patología , SuizaRESUMEN
Se realizó un estudio prospectivo de intervención a 168 pacientes con el diagnóstico de hernia discal lumbar. A todos se les practicaron estudios radiológicos simples pre y postoperatorios: Tomografía Axial Computarizada o Resonancia Magnética Nuclear. Se evaluaron elementos del cuadro clínico en el pre y postoperatorios. Se realizó la investigación con el objetivo de describir la aplicación de la técnica microquirúrgica, que permitió la aplicación de la discectomía simple por foraminotomía en la mayoría de los pacientes, con verdadera herniación discal y en el nivel l5-S1(AU)
It was performed a prospective intervention study to 168 patients with the diagnosis of lumbar discal hernia. There were carried out simple pre and post operative radiological studies: Computerized Axial Tomography or Nuclear Magnetic Resonance. There were evaluated some elements of the pre and post operative clinical setting. It was performed the research with the objective to describe the application of the microsurgical technique, what allowed the application of simple discectomy with foraminotomy in most of the patients with real discal hernia in the level 15-SI(AU)
Asunto(s)
Humanos , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/historia , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/cirugía , Desplazamiento del Disco Intervertebral/diagnóstico , Estudios Prospectivos , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Tomografía Computarizada por Rayos X/métodosRESUMEN
Neurological surgery was defined as a separate surgical specialty by Harvey Cushing and a few other surgeons, most of whom were trained and influenced by Cushing. One of these, Raphael Eustace Semmes, became the first neurosurgeon in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1912. After World War II, Semmes and his first associate, Francis Murphey, incorporated the Semmes-Murphey Clinic, which has been primarily responsible for the growth of the Department of Neurosurgery at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in Memphis, as well as the development of select neurosurgical subspecialties in Memphis area hospitals.