4.5 Article

Anatomy of the lumbar interspinous ligament: findings relevant to epidural insertion using loss of resistance

Journal

REGIONAL ANESTHESIA AND PAIN MEDICINE
Volume 46, Issue 12, Pages 1085-1090

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/rapm-2021-103014

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Funding

  1. Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists grant [N18/005]

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The study found that the lumbar interspinous ligament plus supraspinous ligament are biconcave axially, commonly with fat-filled gaps, particularly in the anterior region. These anatomical features may explain false or equivocal loss of resistance during epidural procedures.
Background and objectives The 'loss of resistance' technique is used to determine entry into the epidural space, often by a midline needle in the interspinous ligament before the ligamentum flavum. Anatomical explanations for loss of resistance without entry into the epidural space are lacking. This investigation aimed to improve morphometric characterization of the lumbar interspinous ligament by observation and measurement at dissection and from MRI. Methods Measurements were made on 14 embalmed donor lumbar spines (T12 to S1) imaged with MRI and then dissected along a tilted axial plane aligned with the lumbar interspace. Results In 73 interspaces, median (IQR) lumbar interspinous plus supraspinous ligament length was 29.7 mm (25.5-33.4). Posterior width was 9.2 mm (7.7, 11.9), with narrowing in the middle (4.5 mm (3.0, 6.8)) and an anterior width of 7.3 mm (5.7, 9.8). Fat-filled gaps were present within 55 (75%). Of 51 anterior gaps, 49 (67%) were related to the ligamenta flava junction. Median (IQR) gap length and width were 3.5 mm (2.5, 5.1) and 1.1 mm (0.9, 1.7). Detection of gaps with MRI had 100% sensitivity (95% CI 93.5 to 100), 94.4% specificity (72.7, 99.9), 98.2% (90.4, 100) positive predictive value and 100% (80.5, 100) negative predictive value against dissection as the gold standard. Conclusions The lumbar interspinous ligament plus supraspinous ligament are biconcave axially. It commonly has fat-filled gaps, particularly anteriorly. These anatomical features may form the anatomical basis for false or equivocal loss of resistance.

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