Study Design. A total-of 208 consecutive coccydynia patients were examined
with the same clinical and radiologic protocol.
Objectives. To study radiographic coccygeal lesions in the sitting position
, to elucidate the influence of body mass index on the different lesions, a
nd to establish the effect of coccygeal trauma.
Summary of Background Data. A protocol comparing standing radiographs and r
adiographs subsequently taken in the painful sitting position in coccydynia
patients and in controls has shown two culprit lesions: posterior luxation
and hypermobility. Obesity and a history of trauma have been identified as
risk factors for luxation.
Methods. Dynamic radiographs were obtained. The body mass index was compare
d with the coccygeal angle of incidence, sagittal rotation of the pelvis wh
en sitting down, and the presence and time of previous trauma. The patients
with the newly described lesions were examined after an anesthetic block u
nder fluoroscopic guidance.
Results. Two new coccygeal lesions are described (anterior luxation and spi
cules). Obesity was found to-be a risk factor. The body mass index determin
es the way a subject sits down, and lesion patterns were different in obese
, normal-weight, and thin patients (posterior luxation: 51%, 15.2%, 3.7%; h
ypermobility: 26.5%,30.3%, 14.8%; spicules: 2%,15.9%, 29.6%; normal: 16.3%,
32.6%, 48.1%, respectively; P<0.0001). Trauma affected the type of lesion
only if it was recent (<1 month before the onset of coccydynia), in which c
ase the instability; rate increased from 55.6% to 77.1%. Backward-moving co
ccyges were at greatest risk of trauma.
Conclusions. This protocol allows identification of the culprit lesion in 6
9.2% of cases. The body mass index determines the causative lesion, as does
trauma sustained within the month preceding the onset of the pain.