Author:
Scullen Tyler,Milburn James,Aria Kevin,Mathkour Mansour,Tubbs R. Shane,Kalyvas James
Abstract
Abstract
Study design
We reviewed the available literature systematically without meta-analysis following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines.
Objective
To evaluate contemporary literature on use of spinal diffusion tensor imaging(sDTI) in spinal pathology.
Background
sDTI reveals the location and functional state of critical long tracts and is a potentially useful adjunct in disease management.
Methods
Studies were included if they presented or discussed data from investigative or therapeutic procedures involving sDTI on human subjects in the setting of surgically amenable spinal pathology. Studies were excluded if they were (1) restricted to computational models investigating parameters using data not obtained clinically, (2) about cranial DTI methods, (3) about spinal pathology data not related to surgical management, (4) discussions or overviews of methods/techniques with minimal inclusion of objective experimental or clinical data.
Results
Degenerative pathologies of interest were restricted to either cervical myelopathy (22/29,75.9%) or lumbar spondylosis 7/29,24.1%). Mass-occupying lesions included intradural pathology and discussed preoperative (7/9,77.8%) and intraoperative imaging(2/9,22.2%) as an adjunct to surgery 22.2%. Traumatic pathology focused on spinal cord injury prognosis and severity grading.
Conclusions
sDTI seems useful in surgical decision making and outcome measurements and in establishing clinical prognoses over a wide range of surgical pathologies. Further research is warranted with longer follow-up and larger population sizes in a prospective and controlled protocol.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC