The spine journal : official journal of the North American Spine Society
-
Review Meta Analysis
Epidural injections in prevention of surgery for spinal pain: systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.
Low back pain is debilitating and costly, especially for patients not responding to conservative therapy and requiring surgery. ⋯ Epidural steroid injections may provide a small surgery-sparing effect in the short term compared with control injections and reduce the need for surgery in some patients who would otherwise proceed to surgery.
-
Surgical site infection (SSI) after spinal surgery can result in several serious secondary complications, such as pseudoarthrosis, neurological injury, paralysis, sepsis, and death. There is an increasing body of literature on risk factors, diagnosis, and specific intraoperative interventions, including attention to sterility of instrumentation, application of minimally invasive fusion techniques, intraoperative irrigation, and application of topical antibiotics, that hold the most promise for reduction of SSI. ⋯ Surgical site infections are a common multifactorial problem after spine surgery. There is compelling evidence that improved risk stratification, detection, and prevention will reduce SSIs.