Mazıcan Mustafa, Karluka Ismail, Tuney Davut
Department of Radiology, Division of Interventional Radiology, Başkent University Dr. Turgut Noyan Application and Research Center, 01250 Adana, Turkey.
Department of Radiology, Faculty of Medicine, Marmara University, 34722 Istanbul, Turkey.
Tomography. 2025 Aug 26;11(9):98. doi: 10.3390/tomography11090098.
Thoracic kyphosis has been increasingly associated with altered intra-abdominal and diaphragmatic dynamics, potentially contributing to gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and hiatal hernia (HH). While previous studies have shown a relationship between spinal deformities and GERD symptoms, these findings have been largely observational, with few morphometric analyses. No prior study has directly quantified the relationship between thoracic curvature and hiatal surface area (HSA) using standardized computed tomography (CT)-based methods. Furthermore, existing studies have typically focused on patients with visible hernias, limiting understanding of early, subclinical anatomical changes. This study addresses this gap by evaluating whether thoracic kyphosis is associated with measurable hiatal enlargement, even in the absence of overt HH.
In this retrospective, single-center study, 100 adult patients (50 with thoracic kyphosis, defined as a Cobb angle of ≥50° and 50 age- and sex-matched controls) underwent multidetector CT (MDCT). Hiatal surface area (HSA) was measured on a standardized oblique axial plane aligned with the diaphragmatic crura. Correlation and multivariable regression analyses were performed to assess relationships between Cobb angle and HSA.
The kyphosis group showed significantly larger HSA than controls (5.14 ± 1.31 cm vs. 3.59 ± 0.74 cm; < 0.001). A moderate positive correlation was found between Cobb angle and HSA (r = 0.336, = 0.017). Multivariable analysis identified the Cobb angle as an independent predictor of HSA (β = 0.028; = 0.017), while age and sex were not significant predictors. No overt herniation was present in any subject.
This is the first CT-based morphometric study to demonstrate that thoracic kyphosis is associated with hiatal enlargement, even in the absence of overt herniation. These findings support the hypothesis that postural spinal deformities may predispose individuals to GERD by structurally remodeling the diaphragmatic hiatus.
胸椎后凸越来越多地与腹内和膈肌动力学改变相关,这可能导致胃食管反流病(GERD)和食管裂孔疝(HH)。虽然先前的研究已经表明脊柱畸形与GERD症状之间存在关联,但这些发现大多是观察性的,形态学分析较少。以前没有研究使用基于标准化计算机断层扫描(CT)的方法直接量化胸椎曲度与食管裂孔表面积(HSA)之间的关系。此外,现有研究通常集中于有明显疝的患者,限制了对早期亚临床解剖学变化的理解。本研究通过评估胸椎后凸是否与可测量的食管裂孔扩大相关来填补这一空白,即使在没有明显HH的情况下。
在这项回顾性单中心研究中,100名成年患者(50名胸椎后凸患者,定义为Cobb角≥50°,50名年龄和性别匹配的对照)接受了多排CT(MDCT)检查。在与膈肌脚对齐的标准化斜轴平面上测量食管裂孔表面积(HSA)。进行相关性和多变量回归分析以评估Cobb角与HSA之间的关系。
后凸组的HSA明显大于对照组(5.14±1.31平方厘米对3.59±0.74平方厘米;P<0.001)。发现Cobb角与HSA之间存在中度正相关(r = 0.336,P = 0.017)。多变量分析确定Cobb角是HSA的独立预测因子(β = 0.028;P = 0.017),而年龄和性别不是显著的预测因子。所有受试者均无明显疝出。
这是第一项基于CT的形态学研究,证明即使在没有明显疝出的情况下,胸椎后凸也与食管裂孔扩大相关。这些发现支持了姿势性脊柱畸形可能通过膈肌裂孔的结构重塑使个体易患GERD的假说。