
Ep 134: Back pain in adolescent athletes (part 1) – who, why and what, with Dr Mitchell Selhorst
JOSPT Insights
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The Importance of Radiographs for Active Spondylysis
The spondy is seen on an oblique radiograph and the kind of your four-view radiographs. CT still beats out MRI, but barely anymore. 90% of providers are going to MRI's for their advanced imaging because we don't have that radiation exposure. And so I suspect that if you're looking for an active spondylysis and the X-ray comes back negative then you need to follow up with an MRI.
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