Magnetic resonance imaging and stadiometric assessment of the lumbar discs after sitting and chair-care decompression exercise: a pilot study
Abstract
Background
Sitting is associated with loss of the lumbar lordosis, intervertebral disc (IVD) compression, and height loss, possibly increasing the risk of lower back pain. With a trend toward more sitting jobs worldwide, practical strategies for preventing lumbar flattening and potentially associated low back pain (LBP) are important.
Purpose
The purpose of this study was to determine the feasibility of using upright magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and stadiometry to measure changes in height and configuration of the lumbar spine before and after normal sitting and a seated unloading exercise intervention.
Study Design/Setting
This is a hospital-based pilot study involving pre-post assessments in a single group.
Patient Sample
The sample comprises six asymptomatic hospital employees involved in either general patient care or research writing/data collection.
Outcome Measures
The outcome measures were lumbar total midsagittal cross-sectional IVD area, vertical height, lordotic angle derived from digitized MRI examinations, and seated body height measured directly with a stadiometer.
Methods
Midsagittal MRI scans were performed before sitting, after 15 minutes of relaxed sitting (“postsitting”), immediately after seated unloading exercises, and approximately 7 minutes after exercise. Subsequently, seated stadiometry assessments were performed after 10 minutes of supine recumbency, 15 minutes of relaxed sitting, and every 10 seconds after seated unloading exercises until three consecutive height measurements were identical. Digitized midsagittal images were used to derive MRI-based outcome measures. Measurements at postsitting were compared with the corresponding ones at other time points using multiple paired t-tests. The Bonferroni method was used to adjust for multiple pairwise comparisons.
Main Results
After 15 minutes of sitting, mean total IVD area, lordotic angle, and vertical height of the lumbar spine decreased 18.6 mm2, 6.2°, and 12.5 mm, respectively, whereas after seated unloading exercises, these parameters increased by 87.9 mm2, 5.0°, and 21.9 mm, respectively. Similarly, mean seated height on stadiometry decreased by 6.9 mm after 15 minutes of sitting and subsequently increased by 5.7 mm after unloading exercises.
Conclusions
Seated upright MRI and stadiometry, as performed in this study, appear to be feasible methods for detecting compressive and decompressive spinal changes associated with normal sitting and, alternately, seated unloading exercises. Larger studies are encouraged to determine normative values of our study measurements and to determine if morphological changes induced by seated unloading predict treatment response and/or reductions in the incidence of sitting-related LBP.
Keywords: Sitting, Magnetic resonance imaging, Decompression, Lumbar, Prevention
To access this article, please choose from the options below
FDA device/drug status: not applicable.
Author disclosures: JCJF (grants, Research Grant; other relationships, President of Dynamic Disc Designs Corp.); FWS (consulting, Kyphon-Medtronic; speaking and/or teaching arrangements: Kyphon-Medtronic; trips/travel: Kyphon-Medtronic).
Sources of support: JCJF was supported by a grant from the British Columbia Chiropractic College.
PII: S1529-9430(10)00045-8
doi:10.1016/j.spinee.2010.01.009
© 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
