• Beck Beatty posted an update 1 year, 5 months ago

    Current evidence suggests placement of the Superion interspinous spacer (SISS) device compared with laminectomy or laminotomy surgery offers an effective, less invasive treatment option for patients with symptomatic lumbar spinal stenosis. Both SISS placement and laminectomy or laminotomy have risks of complications and a direct comparison of complications between the 2 procedures has not been previously studied. The purpose of this study is to compare the short-term complications of the SISS with laminectomy or laminotomy and highlight device-specific long-term outcomes with SISS.

    Via retrospective review, 189 patients who received lumbar level SISSs were compared with 378 matched controls who underwent primary lumbar spine laminectomy or laminotomy; data were collected from the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database. selleck chemicals Complications analyzed included rates of wound infection, pulmonary embolism, deep venous thrombosis, urinary tract infection, sepsis, septic shed for additional procedures for patients and substantial cost to the healthcare system.

    4.

    Having no differences in adverse events between laminectomies or laminotomies and SISS plus evidence of substantial device-specific long-term adverse outcomes and reoperation should be given consideration when deciding on surgical intervention of 1-2 level lumbar spinal stenosis.

    Having no differences in adverse events between laminectomies or laminotomies and SISS plus evidence of substantial device-specific long-term adverse outcomes and reoperation should be given consideration when deciding on surgical intervention of 1-2 level lumbar spinal stenosis.

    Deep surgical-site infection following thoracolumbar instrumented spinal surgery (DSITIS) is a major complication in spine surgery and its impact on long-term morbidity and mortality is yet to be determined. This article describes the characteristics and evolution of DSITIS in our center over a period of 25 years.

    This single-center, retrospective cohort study included patients diagnosed with DSITIS between January 1992 and December 2016 and with a minimum follow-up after infection diagnosis of 1 year. The Infectious Diseases Society of America criteria and/or Centers for Disease Control and Prevention criteria were used to define DSITIS. Patient data (epidemiological and health status), surgical data, infection characteristics and presentation, isolated microorganisms, required surgical debridements, implant removal, and major complications linked to infection were evaluated.

    A total of 174 patients (106 females) were included in the analysis. Mean follow-up after infection diagnosis was 40 months (56 patients with over 5 years follow-up). Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis, adult deformity, and degenerative lumbar stenosis were the most frequent etiologies for primary surgery. Presentation of infection was considered early (0-3 months since first surgery) in 59.2% of the cases, delayed (3-24 months) in 11.5%, and late (more than 24 months) in 29.3%. All patients were treated by surgical debridement. More than 1 surgical debridement was necessary in 20.7% of cases. Implants were removed in 46.6% of the patients (72.83% in the first surgical debridement). Most frequently isolated microorganisms were

    spp, Enterobacteriaceae, and

    . Major complications appeared in 14.3% of the patients, and over 80% of them required major surgeries to resolve those complications.

    Late DSITIS is more frequent than previously reported. In DSITIS culprits,

    spp, Enterobacteriaceae, and

    predominate. DSITIS produce a high rate of major complications that usually require major surgery for treatment.

    3.

    3.

    Data on timing of complications are important for accurate quality assessments. We sought to better define pre- and postdischarge complications occurring within 90 days of adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery and quantify the effect of multiple complications on recovery.

    We performed a review of 1040 patients who underwent ASD surgery (age 46 ± 23; body mass index 25 ± 7, American Society of Anesthesiologists [ASA] score 2.5 ± 0.6, levels 10 ± 4, revision 9%, 3-column osteotomy 13%). We assessed pre- and postdischarge complications and risk factors for isolated versus multiple complications, as well as the impact of multiple complications.

    The 90-day complication rate was 17.7%. 85 patients (8.2%) developed a predischarge complication, most commonly ileus (12%), and pulmonary embolism (PE; 7.1%). The most common causes of predischarge unplanned reoperation were neurologic injury (12.9%) and surgical site drainage (8.2%). Predictors of a predischarge complication included smoking (odds ratio [OR] 2.2,

    factors for early complications after ASD surgery include COPD, and current smoking. The data presented in this study also provide surgeons with knowledge of the most common complications encountered after ASD surgery, to aid in preoperative patient discussion.

    Adult sagittal spinal deformity (SSD) leads to the recruitment of compensatory mechanisms to maintain standing balance. After regional spinal compensation is exhausted, lower extremity compensation is recruited. Knee flexion, ankle flexion, and sacrofemoral angle increase to drive pelvic shift posterior and increase pelvic tilt. We aim to describe 2 summary angles termed ankle-pelvic angle (APA) and global lower extremity angle (GLA) that incorporate all aspects of lower extremity and pelvic compensation in a comprehensive measurement that can simplify radiographic analysis.

    Full-body sagittal stereotactic radiographs were retrospectively collected and digitally analyzed. Spinal and lower extremity alignment were quantified with existing measures. Two angles-APA and GLA-were drawn as geometrically complementary angles to T1-pelvic angle (TPA) and global sagittal axis (GSA), respectively. Regression analysis was used to represent the predictive relationship between TPA and APA and between GSA and GLA.

    A 4.

    APA and GLA offer a concise and simple method of communicating pelvic and lower extremity compensation.

    APA and GLA offer a concise and simple method of communicating pelvic and lower extremity compensation.

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