Lumbar intervertebral disc calcification in adult

Intervertebral disc calcification (IVDC) is a rare cause of spinal pain. Both children and adults can be involved, however this affection is more common in cervical and thoracic spine than lumbar column. A 52-year-old man, previously healthy, presented with an acute lumbalgia. He complained of spont...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ali Akhaddar, Amine Adraoui
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PAMJ 2020-07-01
Series:PAMJ Clinical Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access: https://www.clinical-medicine.panafrican-med-journal.com/content/article/3/88/pdf/88.pdf
_version_ 1829106852916363264
author Ali Akhaddar
Amine Adraoui
author_facet Ali Akhaddar
Amine Adraoui
author_sort Ali Akhaddar
collection DOAJ
description Intervertebral disc calcification (IVDC) is a rare cause of spinal pain. Both children and adults can be involved, however this affection is more common in cervical and thoracic spine than lumbar column. A 52-year-old man, previously healthy, presented with an acute lumbalgia. He complained of spontaneous low back pain for more than 4 months, aggravated for the last few weeks. He denied any history of injury, important change in weight, systemic disease or recent episodes of fever. Physical examination revealed limitation in low back movements with paraspinal muscle spasm. Straight leg test and tendon reflexes were normal without any neurologic deficits. Computed tomography scan (A, B, C) showed an unusual homogenous, well limited, calcified lesion at the L4-L5 intervertebral level (arrows) with a straightness of the lumbar spine. The calcified structure rather corresponds to the nucleus pulposus: the central portion of intervertebral disc. Laboratory finding showed no inflammatory sign. The patient was treated with rest, analgesic and anti-inflammatory agents. Symptoms resolved few weeks later. The etiology of IVDC still remains uncertain and in most adult patients, this phenomenon is known as an idiopathic rare condition. The majority of cases are pauci or asymptomatic. Calcification in children is usually spontaneously resolved, unlike in adults in whom calcified deposits in discs are rather permanent. As seen in our patient, most symptomatic cases are treated conservatively with an excellent prognosis. Rarely, the calcified discs may occasionally lead to nerve root or spinal cord compression. Thus, neurosurgical decompression with excision can be planned
first_indexed 2024-12-12T06:29:00Z
format Article
id doaj.art-7bcdf070cf6c4042b542bf48a0dd62db
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2707-2797
2707-2797
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-12T06:29:00Z
publishDate 2020-07-01
publisher PAMJ
record_format Article
series PAMJ Clinical Medicine
spelling doaj.art-7bcdf070cf6c4042b542bf48a0dd62db2022-12-22T00:34:40ZengPAMJPAMJ Clinical Medicine2707-27972707-27972020-07-0138810.11604/pamj-cm.2020.3.88.2443824438Lumbar intervertebral disc calcification in adultAli Akhaddar0Amine Adraoui1 Department of Neurosurgery. Avicenne Military Hospital of Marrakech, Marrakech, Morocco Department of Neurosurgery. Avicenne Military Hospital of Marrakech, Marrakech, Morocco Intervertebral disc calcification (IVDC) is a rare cause of spinal pain. Both children and adults can be involved, however this affection is more common in cervical and thoracic spine than lumbar column. A 52-year-old man, previously healthy, presented with an acute lumbalgia. He complained of spontaneous low back pain for more than 4 months, aggravated for the last few weeks. He denied any history of injury, important change in weight, systemic disease or recent episodes of fever. Physical examination revealed limitation in low back movements with paraspinal muscle spasm. Straight leg test and tendon reflexes were normal without any neurologic deficits. Computed tomography scan (A, B, C) showed an unusual homogenous, well limited, calcified lesion at the L4-L5 intervertebral level (arrows) with a straightness of the lumbar spine. The calcified structure rather corresponds to the nucleus pulposus: the central portion of intervertebral disc. Laboratory finding showed no inflammatory sign. The patient was treated with rest, analgesic and anti-inflammatory agents. Symptoms resolved few weeks later. The etiology of IVDC still remains uncertain and in most adult patients, this phenomenon is known as an idiopathic rare condition. The majority of cases are pauci or asymptomatic. Calcification in children is usually spontaneously resolved, unlike in adults in whom calcified deposits in discs are rather permanent. As seen in our patient, most symptomatic cases are treated conservatively with an excellent prognosis. Rarely, the calcified discs may occasionally lead to nerve root or spinal cord compression. Thus, neurosurgical decompression with excision can be planned https://www.clinical-medicine.panafrican-med-journal.com/content/article/3/88/pdf/88.pdf calcificationdegenerationintervertebral disclumbar spinenucleus pulposusradiculopathyspinal calcification
spellingShingle Ali Akhaddar
Amine Adraoui
Lumbar intervertebral disc calcification in adult
PAMJ Clinical Medicine
calcification
degeneration
intervertebral disc
lumbar spine
nucleus pulposus
radiculopathy
spinal calcification
title Lumbar intervertebral disc calcification in adult
title_full Lumbar intervertebral disc calcification in adult
title_fullStr Lumbar intervertebral disc calcification in adult
title_full_unstemmed Lumbar intervertebral disc calcification in adult
title_short Lumbar intervertebral disc calcification in adult
title_sort lumbar intervertebral disc calcification in adult
topic calcification
degeneration
intervertebral disc
lumbar spine
nucleus pulposus
radiculopathy
spinal calcification
url https://www.clinical-medicine.panafrican-med-journal.com/content/article/3/88/pdf/88.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT aliakhaddar lumbarintervertebraldisccalcificationinadult
AT amineadraoui lumbarintervertebraldisccalcificationinadult