X RAY LUMBAR SPINE STANDING TRUE LATERAL FLEXION & EXTENSION VIEW

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X RAY LUMBAR SPINE STANDING TRUE LATERAL FLEXION & EXTENSION VIEW
discountup to 50% off

X RAY LUMBAR SPINE STANDING TRUE LATERAL FLEXION & EXTENSION VIEW, in Visit Clinic

An X-ray series showing lumbar spine alignment and motion during bending to check for instability or problems in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Tissue
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
31 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a X RAY LUMBAR SPINE STANDING TRUE LATERAL FLEXION & EXTENSION VIEW Test in Visit Clinic?

This X-ray series evaluates the lumbar spine while you stand and bend forward and backward. It measures how the vertebrae move and line up during true lateral flexion and extension. That helps identify instability, abnormal motion, or sliding of spinal bones. It is important for diagnosing causes of persistent low back pain, nerve irritation, or suspected spine injury. Doctors use it to decide on treatments, monitor fusion or degenerative changes, and plan surgery when motion-related problems are suspected.

X RAY LUMBAR SPINE STANDING TRUE LATERAL FLEXION & EXTENSION VIEW Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

X RAY LUMBAR SPINE STANDING TRUE LATERAL FLEXION & EXTENSION VIEW Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The X RAY LUMBAR SPINE STANDING TRUE LATERAL FLEXION & EXTENSION VIEW test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a X RAY LUMBAR SPINE STANDING TRUE LATERAL FLEXION & EXTENSION VIEW Test in Visit Clinic?

X RAY LUMBAR SPINE STANDING TRUE LATERAL FLEXION & EXTENSION VIEW is ordered as part of spine imaging when a patient has ongoing low back pain, leg symptoms, or after trauma. It helps find abnormal motion, spondylolisthesis, or failed fusion and guides treatment decisions. Abnormal results can come from degeneration, injury, heavy physical work, obesity, prior surgery, or congenital issues. A family history of spine problems may make this test more likely.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is an X-ray of the LS spine lateral flexion in Visit Clinic?plus

An X‑ray of the lumbosacral (LS) spine in lateral flexion is a side‑bending radiograph taken with the patient bending left and right. It evaluates spinal alignment, segmental mobility, and dynamic instability (for example, spondylolisthesis or fusion assessment). It's used for unexplained low back pain or pre/postoperative evaluation. The test is quick, low‑radiation, and often done with neutral and extension views.

What are the 4 views of the lumbar spine in Visit Clinic?plus

The four standard views of the lumbar spine are anteroposterior (AP), lateral, oblique, and flexion–extension (dynamic) views. AP shows vertebral body alignment and disc spaces; lateral demonstrates vertebral height, canal and sagittal alignment; oblique views visualize facet joints; flexion–extension films assess segmental instability, spondylolisthesis or abnormal motion. These views together give a comprehensive assessment for fractures, degenerative disease and instability.

What is the lateral flexion of the lumbar spine in Visit Clinic?plus

Lateral flexion of the lumbar spine is side‑bending of the lower back in the coronal plane. It occurs through small, segmental movements between lumbar vertebrae and is primarily produced by the quadratus lumborum, internal/external obliques and ipsilateral erector spinae. Motion is limited by facet joint orientation and intervertebral discs; typical active range is roughly 15–20 degrees to each side in healthy adults.

What is lumbar flexion and extension in Visit Clinic?plus

Lumbar flexion is forward bending of the lower spine that decreases the angle between trunk and pelvis, activating abdominal muscles and stretching posterior spinal ligaments and facets; it increases anterior disc pressure. Lumbar extension is backward bending that increases lumbar lordosis, engages paraspinal and gluteal muscles, compresses posterior elements and can relieve anterior disc loading but may irritate facet joints—perform both within pain-free limits.

What is a true lateral X-ray of the spine in Visit Clinic?plus

A true lateral X‑ray of the spine is a lateral projection where vertebral bodies, disc spaces and posterior elements are perfectly superimposed with no rotation. Endplates appear parallel, pedicles aligned, and spinous processes are centered, allowing accurate assessment of alignment and disc height. Proper patient positioning keeps the midsagittal plane perpendicular to the receptor and the X‑ray beam centered over the target level.

Why is lumbar spine X-ray done in Visit Clinic?plus

A lumbar spine X‑ray is done to assess bone-related causes of low back pain, such as fractures, degenerative changes (arthritis, disc space narrowing), spinal alignment problems (scoliosis, spondylolisthesis), and suspected bony infection or tumor. It helps evaluate trauma, guide further imaging, and screen for red flags when pain is severe or persistent. Limitations: it shows bone structure but not soft tissues or disc herniations.