Arch
Phys Med Rehabil 1991 Sep;72(10):734-7
Trigger point
of the posterior iliac crest: painful iliolumbar ligament insertion or
cutaneous dorsal ramus pain? An anatomic study.
Maigne JY, Maigne R.
A trigger point is frequently found over the iliac crest at 7 to 8 cm from
the midline in low-back-pain syndromes. Previously, this was described as
either a painful insertion site of the iliolumbar ligament or pain in the
distribution of the cutaneous dorsal ramus of the first or second lumbar nerve.
The authors performed 37 dissections, and they report their anatomic findings.
The iliac insertion of the iliolumbar ligament is inaccessible to palpation,
being shielded by the iliac crest. The dorsal rami of L1 or L2 nerve roots,
however, cross the crest at 7 cm from the midline, and this distance closely
correlates with the dorsal projection of the iliolumbar ligament insertion.
These rami are superficial and dorsal to the crest, easily accessible to palpation.
In two of the 37 dissections performed, some rami were found to be narrowed
as they crossed through an osteofibrous orifice over the crest, thus being
susceptible to an entrapment neuropathy. The authors conclude that the trigger
point sometimes localized over the iliac crest at 7 cm from the midline likely
corresponds to elicited pain from a cutaneous dorsal ramus originating from
the thoracolumbar junction rather than from the iliac insertion of the iliolumbar
ligament.