Asian Spine J.  2009 Jun;3(1):16-20. 10.4184/asj.2009.3.1.16.

Reliability of MRI findings for Symptomatic Extraforaminal Disc Herniation in Lumbar Spine

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Busan National University School of Medicine, Busan, Korea. jungsublee@pusan.ac.kr

Abstract

STUDY DESIGN: A retrospective study PURPOSE: This study examined the reliability of the MRI findings in detecting symptomatic extraforaminal disc herniation in the lumbar spine. OVERVIEW OF LITERATURE: There are no reports of the characteristics and reliable MRI findings of extraforaminal disc herniation.
METHODS
Thirty age-and gender-matched asymptomatic volunteers and 30 patients with symptomatic extraforaminal disc herniation, who underwent surgery between March 2006 and Dec 2008, were enrolled in this study. All subjects underwent spinal MRI. The following parameters were evaluated: the presence or absence of focal eccentricity of the disc, change in the diameter of the nerve root, and displacement of the nerve root at the extraforaminal zones. Radiologic studies were reviewed blindly and independently by 3 spine surgeons.
RESULTS
The overall agreement in determining the presence or absence of a symptomatic extraforaminal disc herniation between the three reviewers was 89.4% (161/180). The consensus showed focal eccentricity of the disc in 33 cases (55%), a change in diameter in the nerve root in 31 cases (51.7%), and a displacement of the nerve root in 23 cases (38.3%). An assessment of the paired intraobserver and interobserver reliability revealed mean Kappa statistics of 0.833 and 0.667 for focal eccentricity of the disc, 0.656 and 0.556 for a change in the diameter of the nerve root, and 0.669 and 0.020 for a displacement of the nerve root, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS
There are three possible MRI findings that can be used to determine the presence or absence of symptomatic extraforaminal disc herniation. Among these MRI findings, focal eccentricity of the disc was found to be the most reliable.

Keyword

Extraforaminal; Disc herniation; Lumbar spine; Magnetic resonance imaging; Reliability

MeSH Terms

Consensus
Displacement (Psychology)
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Retrospective Studies
Spine
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