The spine journal : official journal of the North American Spine Society
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In the summer of 2009, the vacuum spine board (VSB) was designated by the US Air Force as the preferred method of external spinal immobilization during aeromedical transport of patients with suspected unstable thoracolumbar spine fractures. One purported advantage of the VSB is that, by distributing weight over a larger surface area, it decreases the risk of skin pressure ulceration. ⋯ Both the VSB and historic means (non-VSB) of spinal immobilization appear to be safe and produce only transient morbidity despite an average of 9 to 10 hours of transport. Intubated status was identified as the most important risk factor for the development of a pressure ulcer.
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Exercise has been shown to reduce pain and increase function in patients with chronic low back pain. However up to 70% of patients do not engage in prescribed home exercise. Physiotherapists need to understand more about the complex factors influencing patients' adherence to prescribed home exercise to tailor their exercise interventions more effectively and support patients to self-manage. ⋯ This is the first systematic review investigating adherence to prescribed home exercise in a chronic low back pain population. It is difficult to draw firm conclusions because the research lacks detailed descriptions of intervention content. The use of a taxonomy of behavior change techniques has been suggested to overcome this key problem. This review has highlighted the lack of standardized measures of adherence to prescribed home exercise. The development of a validated measure of adherence should be a priority because this will provide a better understanding of the multitude of factors that may influence adherence to home exercise.
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Multicenter Study
Prognostic factors for return to work in patients with sciatica.
Little is known about the prognostic factors for work-related outcomes of sciatica caused by disc herniation. ⋯ The baseline factors associated with RTW identified in multivariate analysis were age, general health, history of sciatica, duration of the current episode, baseline sciatica bothersomeness, fear-avoidance work, back pain, and the straight-leg-raising test result. Surgical treatment was associated with slower RTW, but surgical patients were more severely affected than patients treated without surgery; so, this finding should be interpreted with caution.
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Symptoms may vary from simple vertebral pain to progressive neurologic deficit because of cervical vertebral hemangioma associated with adjacent cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CVHAWACSM). Often resistant to conservative medical treatment, surgery has been the treatment of choice for these patients, but the optimal surgical strategy for CVHAWACSM has not been defined. ⋯ This procedure seems to be a safe efficient method to treat symptomatic CVHAWACSM. It seems to serve the purpose of providing vertebral augmentation, cord decompression, and rigid fusion at the same sitting. Although the present outcomes are promising, long-term follow-up studies with larger patient numbers are required to confirm this effect.
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Spinal cord compression associated with pseudohypoparathyroidism (PHP) is an increasingly reported sequelae of the underlying metabolic syndrome. The association of neurologic dysfunction with PHP is not well appreciated. We believe this to be secondary to a combination of underlying congenital stenosis, manifest by short pedicles secondary to premature physeal closure, and hypertrophic ossification of the vertebral bony and ligamentous complexes. ⋯ The association of neurologic dysfunction with PHP is not well appreciated. It is important to highlight this rare association. Surgical decompression in patients with PHP yields mixed results but may be of greatest efficacy in younger patients who receive early intervention.