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Morphogenesis of the spinal canal, normal and stenotic

✍ Scribed by M. Roth; J. Krkoška; I. Toman


Publisher
Springer
Year
1976
Tongue
English
Weight
991 KB
Volume
10
Category
Article
ISSN
0028-3940

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✦ Synopsis


The closest formative developmental dependence of the axial skeleton upon the morphogenesis of the intraspinal nervous structures is reflected in the roentgen features of the individual vertebrae as well as of the vertebral column in its entirety. The vertebroneural developmental events are characterized by a steady relative decrease in size of the nervous structures (the first to be laid down and huge in the embryonic period) under a corresponding increase in size of the skeletogenic tissues. There exists experimental evidence that the maintenance of the necessary developmental balance between the two tissues, the bony and the skeletogenic, is a function of the nervous substance. The tight spinal canal appears to result from a failure of the latter neural function leading to overgrowth of the bony structures, viz., to massive vertebrae and laminae encroaching upon the neural contents. Morphogenesis of the normal and tight lumbar spinal canal is discussed with special reference to the developmental interrelations between the cauda equina complex and the lumbar vertebrae.


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Compromise of the spinal canal in Proteu
✍ Skovby, Flemming ;Graham, John M. ;Sonne-Holm, Stig ;Cohen, M. Michael 📂 Article 📅 1993 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 459 KB 👁 2 views

We report on 2 children with spinal stenosis and neurologic sequelae. They illustrate the 2 ways in which spinal compromise may develop in Proteus s y n d r o m e v e r t e b r a l anomalies or tumor infiltration. In one patient, spinal stenosis resulted from an angular kyphoscoliosis. In the other,