Straight spinalitis is a disturbing chronic disease that, like a “slugger”, affects people’s health. Understanding its diagnostic criteria is essential for patients to find a way forward in the fog.
Clinical symptoms of direct spina are often the initial “signal”. Many sufferers feel pain in their backs and stiffness, which is particularly evident when they wake up in the morning, as if their bodies were “frozen” and slowly eased after a period of activity. If this back pain and rigidity last for more than three months, it is important to be vigilant. In addition to the back of the waist, pain may also occur in the hips, with a stasis on both sides, or on the exterior joints of the heel, knee joint, etc. Some patients also have eye problems, such as iris, grapes, etc., which may be associated with red eyes, pain, blurred vision etc. However, these symptoms are not unique to direct spinal diseases and are susceptible to misdiagnosis as other diseases, so further tests are needed to clarify them.
Video-testing plays an important role in diagnosis. X-rays are one of the most common means of detecting changes in characteristics through the photographing of the hips and spines. The early period may be just a slight blur of the joints on the x-rays, like a veil, where, as the disease develops, the osteoporosis occurs on the edge of the joints, as if there was a “bone puncture”, and at a later stage, the gap between the joints becomes narrower until they are integrated. The vertebrae X line also presents a vertebrae, with a quadrilateral vertebrae, which, when severe, is like a joint of bamboo. However, X-rays are not sufficiently sensitive to early detection of pathologies. The C.T. examination will then be able to do a great deal of work, and it will clearly outline the fine structure of the joint, displaying the early osteoporosis of the artery, the cortex erosion, and so forth, and greatly improve the accuracy of the diagnosis. MRI detects the osmosis of the hips and spinal cords, like the “suspensive signal” from inside the body, as well as inflammation of fat deposition and the thickening of the slides, so that the disease is not in a state of disarray, as soon as the symptoms of the patient are emerging, the X-line and the CT do not detect significant anomalies.
Laboratory examinations also provide important leads for diagnosis. The HLA-B27 test is an indicator that is often heard, and that many people with a strong straight spinal column are positive, but not all of them suffer from the disease, but some of them are negative and still suffer from it, so it cannot be used as a separate basis for diagnosis. In addition, two inflammatory indicators, the erythrocyte deposition rate (ESR) and C Reacting Protein (CRP), are often tested and, if they rise, suggest that there may be inflammatory reactions in the body, but they may also rise in other inflammatory diseases and are less specific. The diagnosis of direct spinal disease does not depend on a single test or symptom, but requires clinical doctors, like experienced detectives, to synthesize clinical symptoms, visual and laboratory results, twirl and carefully analyse the findings. If one finds symptoms of suspected direct spinal disease in one ‘ s own or around one ‘ s person, it is important that they are not delayed and that they visit the hospital in a timely manner so that they can be clearly diagnosed through a comprehensive examination. Only early diagnosis can provide valuable time for effective follow-up treatment, help patients to better control their condition, improve their quality of life and embrace healthy lives.