The relationship between thoracic kyphosis and age, and normative values across age groups: a systematic review of healthy adults

Abstract Background Thoracic kyphosis is reported to increase with ageing. However, this relationship has not been systematically investigated. Peoples’ kyphosis often exceeds 40°, but 40° is the widely accepted cut-off and threshold for normality. Consequently, patients may be misclassified. Accura...

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Main Authors: Mattia Zappalá, Stephen Lightbourne, Nicola R. Heneghan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-07-01
Series:Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13018-021-02592-2
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spelling doaj-650d1037b8244d4bb944f27b1b21877d2021-07-11T11:36:59ZengBMCJournal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research1749-799X2021-07-0116111810.1186/s13018-021-02592-2The relationship between thoracic kyphosis and age, and normative values across age groups: a systematic review of healthy adultsMattia Zappalá0Stephen Lightbourne1Nicola R. Heneghan2Physiotherapy Department, St John & St Elizabeth HospitalBermuda Hospitals Board, King Edward Memorial HospitalCentre of Precision Rehabilitation for Spinal Pain (CPR Spine), School of Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of BirminghamAbstract Background Thoracic kyphosis is reported to increase with ageing. However, this relationship has not been systematically investigated. Peoples’ kyphosis often exceeds 40°, but 40° is the widely accepted cut-off and threshold for normality. Consequently, patients may be misclassified. Accurate restoration of kyphosis is important to avoid complications following spinal surgery. Therefore, specific reference values are needed. The objective of the review is to explore the relationship between thoracic kyphosis and age, provide normative values of kyphosis for different age groups and investigate the influence of gender and ethnicity. Methods Two reviewers independently conducted a literature search, including seven databases and the Spine Journal, from inception to April 2020. Quantitative observational studies on healthy adults (18 years of age or older) with no known pathologies, and measuring kyphosis with Cobb’s method, a flexicurve, or a kyphometer, were included. Study selection, data extraction, and study quality assessment (AQUA tool) were performed independently by two reviewers. The authors were contacted if clarifications were necessary. Correlation analysis and inferential statistics were performed (Microsoft Excel). The results are presented narratively. A modified GRADE was used for evidence quality assessment. Results Thirty-four studies (24 moderate-quality, 10 high-quality) were included (n = 7633). A positive moderate correlation between kyphosis and age was found (Spearman 0.52, p < 0.05, T5-T12). Peoples’ kyphosis resulted greater than 40° in 65% of the cases, and it was significantly smaller in individuals younger than 40 years old (x < 40) than in those older than 60 years old (x > 60) 75% of the time (p < 0.05). No differences between genders were found, although a greater kyphosis angle was observed in North Americans and Europeans. Conclusion Kyphosis increases with ageing, varying significantly between x < 40 and x > 60. Furthermore, kyphosis appears to be influenced by ethnicity, but not gender. Peoples’ thoracic sagittal curvature frequently exceeds 40°. Trial registration The review protocol was devised following the PRISMA-P Guidelines, and it was registered on PROSPERO ( CRD42020175058 ) before study commencement.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13018-021-02592-2KyphosisHyperkyphosisAgeingNormative valueCorrelationThoracic spine
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mattia Zappalá
Stephen Lightbourne
Nicola R. Heneghan
spellingShingle Mattia Zappalá
Stephen Lightbourne
Nicola R. Heneghan
The relationship between thoracic kyphosis and age, and normative values across age groups: a systematic review of healthy adults
Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research
Kyphosis
Hyperkyphosis
Ageing
Normative value
Correlation
Thoracic spine
author_facet Mattia Zappalá
Stephen Lightbourne
Nicola R. Heneghan
author_sort Mattia Zappalá
title The relationship between thoracic kyphosis and age, and normative values across age groups: a systematic review of healthy adults
title_short The relationship between thoracic kyphosis and age, and normative values across age groups: a systematic review of healthy adults
title_full The relationship between thoracic kyphosis and age, and normative values across age groups: a systematic review of healthy adults
title_fullStr The relationship between thoracic kyphosis and age, and normative values across age groups: a systematic review of healthy adults
title_full_unstemmed The relationship between thoracic kyphosis and age, and normative values across age groups: a systematic review of healthy adults
title_sort relationship between thoracic kyphosis and age, and normative values across age groups: a systematic review of healthy adults
publisher BMC
series Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research
issn 1749-799X
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Background Thoracic kyphosis is reported to increase with ageing. However, this relationship has not been systematically investigated. Peoples’ kyphosis often exceeds 40°, but 40° is the widely accepted cut-off and threshold for normality. Consequently, patients may be misclassified. Accurate restoration of kyphosis is important to avoid complications following spinal surgery. Therefore, specific reference values are needed. The objective of the review is to explore the relationship between thoracic kyphosis and age, provide normative values of kyphosis for different age groups and investigate the influence of gender and ethnicity. Methods Two reviewers independently conducted a literature search, including seven databases and the Spine Journal, from inception to April 2020. Quantitative observational studies on healthy adults (18 years of age or older) with no known pathologies, and measuring kyphosis with Cobb’s method, a flexicurve, or a kyphometer, were included. Study selection, data extraction, and study quality assessment (AQUA tool) were performed independently by two reviewers. The authors were contacted if clarifications were necessary. Correlation analysis and inferential statistics were performed (Microsoft Excel). The results are presented narratively. A modified GRADE was used for evidence quality assessment. Results Thirty-four studies (24 moderate-quality, 10 high-quality) were included (n = 7633). A positive moderate correlation between kyphosis and age was found (Spearman 0.52, p < 0.05, T5-T12). Peoples’ kyphosis resulted greater than 40° in 65% of the cases, and it was significantly smaller in individuals younger than 40 years old (x < 40) than in those older than 60 years old (x > 60) 75% of the time (p < 0.05). No differences between genders were found, although a greater kyphosis angle was observed in North Americans and Europeans. Conclusion Kyphosis increases with ageing, varying significantly between x < 40 and x > 60. Furthermore, kyphosis appears to be influenced by ethnicity, but not gender. Peoples’ thoracic sagittal curvature frequently exceeds 40°. Trial registration The review protocol was devised following the PRISMA-P Guidelines, and it was registered on PROSPERO ( CRD42020175058 ) before study commencement.
topic Kyphosis
Hyperkyphosis
Ageing
Normative value
Correlation
Thoracic spine
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13018-021-02592-2
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