The spine journal : official journal of the North American Spine Society
-
Spontaneous spinal hematoma (SSH) after low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) therapy is a rare cause of compressive myelopathy with neurological deficit. Emergent surgical decompression is commonly advocated for optimal neurological recovery. Only three cases of spontaneous spinal subdural hematomas after LMWH therapy have been reported in the literature, and this is the first report of a spontaneous cervical epidural hematoma (EDH). ⋯ LMWH therapy is an important cause of SSH leading to significant neurological deficits. Conservative management is a viable treatment option in patients who demonstrate early and sustained neurological recovery with the cessation of LMWH therapy.
-
Achieving fusion across the lumbosacral junction is challenging because of the unfavorable biomechanics associated with ending a fusion at this level. Bicortical placement of S1 pedicle screws can increase the construct stability at the lumbosacral junction; however, construct failure and pseudoarthrosis can still result. Iliac screws have been shown to increase the stiffness of lumbosacral constructs, but disadvantages include difficulty in connecting the iliac screw to adjacent sacral screws, painful screw loosening or prominence requiring removal, and the inability to place the screws in some patients with previous iliac crest autograft harvest. ⋯ Three-dimensional image guidance allows for safe placement of large S2 sacral alar screws that can provide additional biomechanical stability to lumbosacral constructs or serve as an alternate point of sacral fixation when S1 pedicle screws cannot be salvaged or placed in a medial trajectory.
-
The correlation between obesity and incidence of complications in spine surgery is unclear, with some reports suggesting linear relationships between body mass index (BMI) and complication incidence and others noting no relationship. ⋯ This prospective assessment of perioperative complications in elective degenerative thoracolumbar procedures shows no relationship between patient BMI and the incidence of perioperative minor or major complications. Specific care in perioperative positioning may limit the risk of perioperative positioning palsies in obese patients.
-
Recurrent herniation of the nucleus pulposus (HNP) frequently causes poor outcomes after lumbar discectomy. The relationship between obesity and recurrent HNP has not previously been reported. ⋯ Obesity was a strong and independent predictor of recurrent HNP after lumbar microdiscectomy. Surgeons should incorporate weight loss counseling into their preoperative discussions with patients.
-
Vertebral osteolysis has been reported as a complication of off-label recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2 (rhBMP-2) use in transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion (TLIF). It has been postulated that end plate violation during disc space preparation, rhBMP-2 overdosing, or a combination thereof can contribute to the development of vertebral osteolysis when rhBMP-2 is used in the lumbar interspace. ⋯ It has been proposed that rhBMP-2-induced vertebral osteolysis occurring in TLIF procedures may be secondary to end plate violation during disc preparation or overdosing of rhBMP-2. Although overdosing may have also contributed to vertebral osteolysis in our two cases, the end plate violation from subchondral cyst formation that was present on preoperative CT scans seemed to be the origin of the osteolysis suggesting that the presence of preoperative subchondral cysts may be an additional risk factor for development of osteolysis in these patients.