Review of existing grading systems for cervical or lumbar disc and facet joint degeneration

被引:211
作者
Kettler, Annette [1 ]
Wilke, Hans-Joachim [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Ulm, Inst Orthopaed Res & Biomech, Ulm, Germany
关键词
D O I
10.1007/s00586-005-0954-y
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
The aim of this literature review was to present and to evaluate all grading systems for cervical and lumbar disc and facet joint degeneration, which are accessible from the MEDLINE database. A MEDLINE search was conducted to select all articles presenting own grading systems for cervical or lumbar disc or facet joint degeneration. To give an overview, these grading systems were listed systematically depending on the spinal region they refer to and the methodology used for grading. All systems were checked for reliability tests and those recommended for use having an interobserver Kappa or Intraclass Correlation Coefficient > 0.60 if disc degeneration was graded and > 0.40 if facet joint degeneration was graded. MEDLINE search revealed 42 different grading systems. Thirty of these were used to grade lumbar spine degeneration, ten were used to grade cervical spine degeneration and two were used to grade both. Thus, the grading systems for the lumbar spine represented the vast majority of all 42 grading systems. Interobserver reliability tests were found for 12 grading systems. Based on their Kappa or Intraclass Correlation Coefficients nine of these could be recommended for use and three could not. All other systems could neither be recommended nor not be recommended since reliability tests were missing. These systems should therefore first be tested before use. The design of the grading systems varied considerably. Five grading systems were beginning with the lowest degree of degeneration, 37, however, with the normal, not degenerated state. A 5-grade scale was used in six systems, a 4-grade scale in 24, a 3-grade scale in eight and a 2-grade scale in three systems. In 15 cases the normal, not degenerated state was assigned to "grade 0", in another 15 cases, however, this state was assigned to "grade 1". This wide variety in the design of the grading systems makes comparisons difficult and may easily lead to confusion. We would therefore recommend to define certain standards. Our suggestion would be to use a scale of three to five grades, to begin the scale with the not degenerated state and to assign this state to "grade 0".
引用
收藏
页码:705 / 718
页数:14
相关论文
共 74 条
[1]   'Stress' distributions inside intervertebral discs - The effects of age and degeneration [J].
Adams, MA ;
McNally, DS ;
Dolan, P .
JOURNAL OF BONE AND JOINT SURGERY-BRITISH VOLUME, 1996, 78B (06) :965-972
[2]   THE STAGES OF DISK DEGENERATION AS REVEALED BY DISCOGRAMS [J].
ADAMS, MA ;
DOLAN, P ;
HUTTON, WC .
JOURNAL OF BONE AND JOINT SURGERY-BRITISH VOLUME, 1986, 68 (01) :36-41
[3]  
[Anonymous], EPIDEMIOLOGY CHRONIC
[4]   The relationship between height, shape and histological changes in early degeneration of the lower lumbar discs [J].
Berlemann U. ;
Gries N.C. ;
Moore R.J. .
European Spine Journal, 1998, 7 (3) :212-217
[5]   Classification of age-related changes in lumbar intervertebral discs [J].
Boos, N ;
Weissbach, S ;
Rohrbach, H ;
Weiler, C ;
Spratt, KF ;
Nerlich, AG .
SPINE, 2002, 27 (23) :2631-2644
[6]   Immunolocalization of type X collagen in human lumbar intervertebral discs during ageing and degeneration [J].
Boos, N ;
Nerlich, AG ;
Wiest, I ;
von der Mark, K ;
Aebi, M .
HISTOCHEMISTRY AND CELL BIOLOGY, 1997, 108 (06) :471-480
[7]   QUANTITATIVE MR-IMAGING OF LUMBAR INTERVERTEBRAL DISKS AND VERTEBRAL BODIES - METHODOLOGY, REPRODUCIBILITY, AND PRELIMINARY-RESULTS [J].
BOOS, N ;
WALLIN, A ;
SCHMUCKER, T ;
AEBI, M ;
BOESCH, C .
MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, 1994, 12 (04) :577-587
[8]  
BRANTZAWADZKI MN, 1995, SPINE, V20, P1257, DOI 10.1097/00007632-199506000-00010
[9]   CERVICAL SPONDYLOSIS - A CLINICAL STUDY WITH COMPARATIVE RADIOLOGY [J].
BROOKER, AEW ;
BARTER, RW .
BRAIN, 1965, 88 :925-&
[10]   SPINE UPDATE - AGING AND DEGENERATION OF THE HUMAN INTERVERTEBRAL DISC [J].
BUCKWALTER, JA .
SPINE, 1995, 20 (11) :1307-1314