Oda T, Fujiwara K, Yonenobu K, Azuma B, Ochi T
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Osaka University Medical School, Suita, Japan.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 1995 May 15;20(10):1128-35. doi: 10.1097/00007632-199505150-00004.
This study analyzed the natural course of cervical spine involvement in rheumatoid arthritis by serial radiographs.
The purpose was to determine the pattern of progression of cervical spine lesions in rheumatoid arthritis and predictors for the extent of progression.
Subluxation frequently occurs as a result of rheumatoid involvement of the cervical spine. It may be severe in patients with mutilans deformities in the hands and feet. The extent of progression in a given patient is still unpredictable.
Serial cervical radiographs in 49 patients with rheumatoid arthritis were analyzed. The extent of progression was evaluated by rheumatoid arthritis subset defined previously, which reflected the final extent of joint erosion in this systemic disease and could be roughly classified during early stages of the disease.
In the upper cervical spine, reducible anterior atlantoaxial subluxation occurred first. Vertical subluxation of the axis appeared next. Irreducible change of preceding anterior atlantoaxial subluxation was a sign of the start of vertical subluxation. In subaxial lesion, subluxation occurred less frequently (22.4%) than upper cervical lesion (77.6%). The extent of progression was different with the rheumatoid arthritis subset. In the upper cervical spine, none of the subset with least erosive disease developed vertical subluxation, whereas 52% of the subset with more erosive disease and 88% of the subset with mutilating disease advanced to vertical subluxation. The extent of progression was well correlated with the number of joints with erosion. Subaxial subluxation was often seen and became irreducible in mutilating disease and more erosive disease, but not in least erosive disease.
A progressive pattern of the upper cervical subluxations was clarified. That is, upper cervical lesions progressed from reducible anterior atlantoaxial subluxation to irreducible anterior atlantoaxial subluxation with vertical subluxation. This extent of progression was different with the rheumatoid arthritis subset, which was also related to the development of subaxial subluxation. The most aggressive arthritis classification, a subset with mutilating disease, had the more severe subluxation in both upper and subaxial cervical spine.
本研究通过系列X线片分析类风湿关节炎颈椎受累的自然病程。
旨在确定类风湿关节炎颈椎病变的进展模式及进展程度的预测因素。
类风湿关节炎累及颈椎常导致半脱位。在手和足有毁损性畸形的患者中可能较为严重。特定患者的进展程度仍不可预测。
分析49例类风湿关节炎患者的系列颈椎X线片。采用先前定义的类风湿关节炎亚组评估进展程度,该亚组反映了这种全身性疾病中关节侵蚀的最终程度,且在疾病早期可大致分类。
在上颈椎,首先出现可复位的寰枢前脱位。接着出现枢椎垂直半脱位。先前寰枢前脱位不可复位的改变是垂直半脱位开始的标志。在下颈椎病变中,半脱位的发生率(22.4%)低于上颈椎病变(77.6%)。进展程度因类风湿关节炎亚组而异。在上颈椎,侵蚀性最小的亚组均未发生垂直半脱位,而侵蚀性较强的亚组中有52%、毁损性亚组中有88%进展为垂直半脱位。进展程度与侵蚀关节的数量密切相关。下颈椎半脱位在毁损性疾病和侵蚀性较强的疾病中常见且变为不可复位,但在侵蚀性最小的疾病中未见。
明确了上颈椎半脱位的进展模式。即上颈椎病变从可复位的寰枢前脱位发展为伴有垂直半脱位的不可复位的寰枢前脱位。这种进展程度因类风湿关节炎亚组而异,也与下颈椎半脱位的发生有关。最具侵袭性的关节炎分类,即毁损性疾病亚组在上、下颈椎均有更严重的半脱位。