cervicothoracolumbosacral
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From cervico- + thoraco- + lumbo- + sacral.
Adjective
[edit]cervicothoracolumbosacral (not comparable)
- (medicine) Of or relating to the cervical, thoracic, lumbar, and sacral portions of the spine.
- 1976, Wilton H. Bunch, Robert D. Keagy, Principles of orthotic treatment, Mosby:
- An orthosis intended to encompass the entire spine would be a cervicothoracolumbosacral orthosis (CTLSO).
- 1997, Bertram Goldberg, John D. Hsu, American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, Atlas of Orthoses and Assistive Devices, Mosby Incorporated
- The first effective orthosis for the treatment of spinal deformities was the cervicothoracolumbosacral orthosis (CTLSO), known as the Milwaukee brace, which was developed by Blount and Schmidt in 1948 […]
- 1998, Alan M. Levine, Spine Trauma, W B Saunders Company, →ISBN:
- Sacroiliac, lumbosacral, cervicothoracolumbosacral, and thoracolumbosacral orthoses may be used in rigid or flexible forms.
- 2012, Sanjeev Agarwal,, Current Orthopaedic Practice: A concise guide for postgraduate exams, tfm Publishing Limited, →ISBN, page 128:
- Bracing is advised for small, flexible curves and can be a thoracolumbosacral or cervicothoracolumbosacral orthosis (Milwaukee brace). The brace is continued until the curve has been stable for 2 years.
- 2012, Michelle M. Lusardi, Milagros Jorge, Millee Jorge, Caroline C. Nielsen, Orthotics and Prosthetics in Rehabilitation, Elsevier Health Sciences, →ISBN, page 385:
- The Milwaukee brace, a cervicothoracolumbosacral orthosis (CTLSO), was initially employed as a postoperative modality but soon found a more important role.
- 2013, Jessi Rodriguez Ohanesian, The Ultimate Guide to the Physician Assistant Profession, McGraw Hill Professional, →ISBN:
- Most of our patients wear a body brace after neurosurgery, and the surgical team determines when the brace can be safely removed. I ask the specialty registrar to see Mr. P, who is anxious to have his cervicothoracolumbosacral body brace removed.