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- Yutaka Yabe, Keisuke Ishikawa, Daisuke Kurosawa, Eiichi Murakami, and Toshimi Aizawa.
- Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, National Hospital Organization Sendai Nishitaga Hospital, Sendai, Japan. yabe@med.tohoku.ac.jp.
- Eur Spine J. 2024 Nov 26.
PurposeDestructive spondyloarthropathy (DSA) is a serious complication of long-term haemodialysis; it commonly occurs in the cervical spine and has been investigated in cervical lesions. Although DSA of the lumbar spine has been reported, only few studies have investigated this, and the characteristics of patients with lumbar DSA are unclear. The present study aimed to elucidate the prevalence of DSA and its clinical characteristics in patients with DSA in the lumbar spine using computed tomography (CT) images of the patients who underwent lumbar spine surgery.MethodsConsecutive patients undergoing haemodialysis who underwent lumbar spine surgery (n = 67) were assessed. DSA was diagnosed using CT images, and the patients were divided into non-DSA and DSA groups. The differences in the clinical characteristics of the patients in the two groups were analysed.ResultsThe prevalence of patients diagnosed with DSA was 31.3%. The mean intra- and inter-observer kappa values of DSA classification using CT images were 0.68 and 0.53, respectively. Although there were no significant differences in the age, sex, body mass index, reason for lumbar surgery, disease causing haemodialysis, age at the start of haemodialysis, or duration of haemodialysis between the non-DSA and DSA groups, the duration of haemodialysis tended to be longer in the DSA group.ConclusionAmong patients on haemodialysis who underwent lumbar spine surgery, the prevalence of patients with DSA was 31.3%. Classification of DSA using CT showed moderate-to-substantial agreement. Patients with DSA tended to have a longer haemodialysis duration.© 2024. The Author(s).
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