Abstract

The medical cost associated with back pain in the United States is considerable and growing. Although the differential diagnosis of back pain is broad, epidemiological studies suggest a correlation between adult and adolescent complaints. Injury of the pars interarticularis is one of the most common identifiable causes of ongoing low back pain in adolescent athletes. It constitutes a spectrum of disease ranging from bone stress to spondylolysis and spondylolisthesis. Bone stress may be the earliest sign of disease. Repetitive bone stress causes bone remodeling and may result in spondylolysis, a non-displaced fracture of the pars interarticularis. A fracture of the pars interarticularis may ultimately become unstable leading to spondylolisthesis. Results in the literature support the use of bone scintigraphy to diagnose bone stress in patients with suspected spondylolysis. Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) provides more contrast than planar bone scintigraphy, increases the sensitivity and improves anatomic localization of skeletal lesions without exposing the patient to additional radiation. It also provides an opportunity for better correlation with other imaging modalities, when necessary. As such, the addition of SPECT to standard planar bone scintigraphy can result in a more accurate diagnosis and a better chance for efficient patient care. It is our expectation that by improving our ability to correctly diagnose bone stress in patients with suspected injury of the posterior elements, the long-term cost of managing this condition will be lowered.

Highlights

  • The economic burden of back pain is estimated to be more than $90 billion per year in the United States [1,2]

  • Injury of the pars interarticularis is one of the most common identifiable causes of ongoing low back pain in adolescent athletes [6,8,9]. It constitutes a spectrum of disease from bone stress through spondylolysis and spondylolisthesis

  • Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) identified additional sites of pars stress in 5 of the 19 patients with pars stress suggested on planar bone scintigraphy (26%)

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Summary

Introduction

The economic burden of back pain is estimated to be more than $90 billion per year in the United States [1,2]. Injury of the pars interarticularis is one of the most common identifiable causes of ongoing low back pain in adolescent athletes [6,8,9] It constitutes a spectrum of disease from bone stress through spondylolysis and spondylolisthesis. Bone stress may be absent at the site of spondylolysis In this case, bone remodeling and tracer uptake may occur at the pars interarticularis immediately above or below the level of fracture. There are reports in the literature of a normal spine CT in patients with abnormalities on planar bone scintigraphy and SPECT [16,25] This may be explained by the fact that tracer uptake in the region of the pars interarticularis on scintigraphic studies corresponds to

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