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August 2019 Vol. 7 No.8
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Merit Research Journal of Medicine and Medical
Sciences (ISSN: 2354-323X) Vol. 7(8) pp. 304-307,
August, 2019
Copyright © 2019 Merit Research Journals
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.3381627 |
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Original Research Article
The cervical spine in juvenile
idiopathic arthritis |
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S. El Hassani Sbai1*, S. Rostom1,
B. Amine1 and R. Bahiri1 |
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1Department
of Rheumatology A (Pr R. Bahiri), El Ayachi hospital, University
Hospital of Rabat-Sale, Morocco
*Corresponding Author’s E-mail: elhassanisalma1@gmail.com
Tel: 00-212-537-78-29-19 / 17-14
Fax: 00-212-537-88-33-27
Accepted August 26, 2019 |
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Abstract |
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The objective of
this research is to describe the clinical and radiological
aspects of cervical spine involvement in Juvenile Idiopathic
Arthritis (JIA). Patients fulfilled the ILAR (International
League Against Rheumatism) criteria for the diagnosis of the JIA.
The diagnosis of JIA course types were used in this study. In
all patients conventional X-rays of the cervical spine were
obtained and the relationship between clinical status (neck
pain, limitation of neck motion and neurological complications)
and radiographs findings were studied. Cervical spine disease
was assessed according clinical parameters related to JIA. 120
patients were included, mean age 22 years ± 10 [5-49], disease
duration of JIA was 12 years ± 9.6 [2-35]. Thirty cases of neck
pain were found, 18 patients had an inflammatory cervical pain.
Neurological complications (tetraparesia in one case and one
case of pyramidal irritation) were noted. In our series no
cervical spine surgery was performed. In 27 cases (22.5 %),
radiological inflammatory abnormalities were detected in the
cervical spine: Apophyseal joint ankylosis was noted in 14
patients, anterior atlantoaxial subluxation in 6 and cervical
syndesmophytosis in 5 cases. Cervical spine involvement was more
frequent in polyarticular and spondylarthropathy subtypes
(p=0.01). Cervical spine changes were common in patients with
long lasting (p < 0.001) and severe JIA (p= 0.04). In our
series, the most frequent inflammatory change was apophyseal
joint ankylosis and anterior atlantoaxial subluxation. Cervical
spine changes are common in patients with long lasting JIA.
Keywords: Cervical spine, Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis
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