Summary The L5-S1 is also called the lumbosacral joint. It is the part of the spine where the lumbar spine ends and the ...
Sacroiliitis is one potential cause of SI joint dysfunction. Your sacroiliac (SI) joints are where your spine (sacrum) and pelvis (iliac) connect. Your sacrum is the triangle-shaped bone at the ...
Understanding these associations can enhance the diagnosis and treatment strategies for patients experiencing low back pain related to LSTV. Lumbosacral Transitional Vertebrae (LSTV): An ...
Doctors use the American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA ... Sensory but not motor function is preserved below the neurological level and includes the sacral segments S4-S5 (light touch, pin prick at ...
Your SI joint, or sacroiliac joint, connects your sacrum (otherwise known as the tailbone) and your illiac, the bone of the topside of your pelvis. Technically, there's two of these joints—one on ...
New research confirms that sacral nerve stimulation is a feasible ... for overactive bladder is hypothesized to correct deficient spinal inhibitory signals, which would suppress detrusor ...
At the lower end, the 11 lumbar, sacral, and coccygeal dermatomes are often grouped together as the lower extremity dermatomes. A spinal nerve root is a bundle of nerve fibers that branches off ...