European spine journal : official publication of the European Spine Society, the European Spinal Deformity Society, and the European Section of the Cervical Spine Research Society
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Less invasive decompressive surgery has emerged as a logical surgical treatment alternative to wide decompression of spinal stenosis. The clinical outcomes of such conservative surgical treatment, however, are not well known. The aim of the study was to evaluate short-term psychometric and functional outcomes after conservative decompressive surgery for lumbar canal stenosis. ⋯ Overall, 58% (21/36) of patients met the successful surgical outcome criteria, including 14 subjects who met all four success criteria. Based upon a stringent definition of successful surgical outcome, the results of a conservative laminectomy were as good as those of more aggressive decompressive procedures presented in the literature. Our findings indicate that, even in a highly organic disorder such as spinal stenosis, illness behavior plays an important role in predicting surgical outcome.
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Patients with cervical facet lesions and facet joint injury sometimes experience diffuse neck pain, headache, and arm and shoulder pain. However, the pathophysiology of the intensity and expansion of facet joint pain has not yet been investigated. Retrograde transport of fluoro-gold (F-G) and immunohistochemistry of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) was used in 20 rats (control group, n=10; injured group, n=10). ⋯ The numbers of CGRP-ir F-G labelled DRG neurons as a percentage of all F-G labelled DRG neurons at C3, C4, C5, C6, C7, C8, T1, T2, and T3 respectively were 30, 22, 43, 47, 21, 19, 25, 36 and 30% in the control group, and 13, 15, 23, 17, 15, 8, 16, 28 and 35% in the injured group, with the injured group showing a significantly lower percentage of CGRP-ir F-G labelled neurons than the control group at C5 and C6 (P<0.05). However, the mean cross-sectional area of F-G labelled CGRP-ir cells from C3 to C8 DRGs increased from 625+/-22 micro m(2) to 878+/-33 micro m(2) in the injured group (P<0.001). Associated with the injured facet joints, the phenotypic switch to large neurons may complicate the mechanism of injured facet pain.
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Posterior lumbar interbody fusion (PLIF) using threaded cages has gained wide popularity for lumbosacral spinal disease. Our biomechanical tests showed that PLIF using a single diagonal cage with unilateral facetectomy does add a little to spinal stability and provides equal or even higher postoperative stability than PLIF using two posterior cages with bilateral facetectomy. Studies also demonstrated that cages placed using a posterior approach did not cause the same increase in spinal stiffness seen with pedicle screw instrumentation, and we concluded that cages should not be used posteriorly without other forms of fixation. ⋯ No implant fractures or deformities occurred in any of the patients. PLIF using diagonal insertion of a single threaded cage with supplemental transpedicular screw/rod instrumentation enables sufficient decompression and solid interbody fusion to be achieved with minimal invasion of the posterior spinal elements. It is a clinically safer, easier, and more economical means of accomplishing PLIF.
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Comparative Study
Temporary external pedicular fixation versus definitive bony fusion: a prospective comparative study on pain relief and function.
Temporary external pedicular fixation is used as a prognostic instrument when treating degenerative conditions with spinal fusion. We studied the validity of the method and whether a functional test could improve the prognostic value of such fixation. Twenty-six patients with long-standing lumbar pain had an external temporary fixation. ⋯ We conclude that with a good outcome ratio of 14 patients out of 19 having a solid fusion, the external frame improved patient selection and can be used as a valid prognostic instrument. The pain relief and function after definitive fusion can not be quantified by the external fixation, probably due to the fact that the stabilisation with an external frame is partial. The value of the functional test design presented is moderate, and an outcome evaluation comprising pain relief at rest and mean pain level during a week in fixation seems adequate.
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Spontaneous spinal epidural hematoma (SSEH) is a rare entity. SSEH occurring anterior to the spinal cord in the cervical region with spontaneous improvement is even more rare. One such rare case is reported. ⋯ As the patient had started improving by the time he sought neurosurgical consultation, he was treated conservatively, and he improved over a period of 2 months. This case illustrates that, though rare, chronic spontaneous spinal epidural hematoma should be entertained in the differential diagnosis of cervical cord compression. Spontaneous resolution of spinal epidural hematomas is known to occur, and in properly selected cases, surgical intervention may not always be necessary.