Abstract
The objective of the present study was to determine the incidence of unsuspected intraspinal pathology and to assess the value of atypical clinical features as predictors of these intraspinal pathologies, in patients with idiopathic scoliosis. Twenty-five consecutive patients (13 boys, 12 girls) with idiopathic scoliosis were prospectively evaluated with MRI. Magnetic resonance imaging detected intraspinal pathology in seven patients (28%), which included syringohydromyelia with Chiari I malformation (n = 5), and syringomyelia and dumb-bell neurofibromas in one patient each, respectively. Dural ectasia was also present in five patients. Atypical features, described in the literature as pointers to intraspinal pathologies such as the age < 11 years at presentation, presence of pain, hyperkyphosis, severe curves and the presence of the left thoracic or thoracolumbar curves, were seen to be equally distributed between the two groups (those with and without intraspinal pathologies), thus raising doubts about the importance of these features.
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