1.Postoperative Radiographic Early-Onset Adjacent Segment Degeneration after Single-Level L4–L5 Posterior Lumbar Interbody Fusion in Patients without Preoperative Severe Sagittal Spinal Imbalance
Yuji MATSUOKA ; Kenji ENDO ; Hidekazu SUZUKI ; Yasunobu SAWAJI ; Hirosuke NISHIMURA ; Taichiro TAKAMATSU ; Osamu KOJIMA ; Kazuma MURATA ; Takeshi SEKI ; Shinji HORIE ; Takamitsu KONISHI ; Kengo YAMAMOTO
Asian Spine Journal 2018;12(4):743-748
STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective study. PURPOSE: To investigate the relationship between preoperative total spinal sagittal alignment and the early onset of adjacent segment degeneration (ASD) after single-level posterior lumbar interbody fusion (PLIF) in patients with normal sagittal spinal alignment. OVERVIEW OF LITERATURE: Postoperative early-onset ASD is one of the complications after L4–L5 PLIF, a common surgical procedure for lumbar degenerative disease in patents without severe sagittal imbalance. A better understanding of the preoperative characteristics of total spinal sagittal alignment associated with early-onset ASD could help prevent the condition. METHODS: The study included 70 consecutive patients diagnosed with lumbar degenerative disease who underwent single-level L4–L5 PLIF between 2011 and 2015. They were divided into two groups based on the radiographic progression of L3–L4 degeneration after 1-year follow-up: the ASD and the non-ASD (NASD) group. The following radiographic parameters were preoperatively and postoperatively measured: sagittal vertebral axis (SVA), thoracic kyphosis (TK), lumbar lordosis, pelvic tilt, and pelvic incidence (PI). RESULTS: Eight of the 70 patients (11%) experienced ASD after PLIF (three males and five females; age, 64.4±7.7 years). The NASD group comprised 20 males and 42 females (age, 67.7±9.3 years). Six patients of the ASD group showed decreased L3–L4 disc height, one had L3–L4 local kyphosis, and one showed both changes. Preoperative SVA, PI, and TK were significantly smaller in the ASD group than in the NASD group (p <0.05). CONCLUSIONS: A preoperative small SVA and TK with small PI were the characteristic alignments for the risk of early-onset ASD in patients without preoperative severe sagittal spinal imbalance undergoing L4–L5 single-level PLIF.
Animals
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Female
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Follow-Up Studies
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Humans
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Incidence
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Kyphosis
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Lordosis
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Male
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Retrospective Studies
2.Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for Neuropathic Pain with Motor Weakness Caused by Spine Orthodontic Fixation
Kota NAKAMURA ; Shuntaro KAWAGUCHI ; Takeshi KOBAYASHI ; Tomohito SATO ; Yutaro ASAKURA ; Takamitsu YAMAMOTO
The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine 2002;():21036-
An 81-year-old woman sustained a fracture of the vertebra, resulting in grace deformation. After surgery for the spinal fixation, she suffered from left femoral neuropathic pain and motor weakness of both lower extremities. Daily repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) of the lower extremity area in the right motor cortex was applied using a figure-8 coil connected to a magnetic stimulator (MagPro R30;Nagventure).One thousand pulses per session were delivered (10 trains of 10Hz for 10 seconds with 25-seconds intertrain interval) in one day, and this treatment continued for 2 weeks except Sunday. The intensity of rTMS was set at the resting motor threshold for that day. rTMS together with physical therapy resulted in a remarkable amelioration of the femoral pain and motor weakness of both lower extremities. Pain on a Visual Analogue Scale dropped from 70% to 22%, and walking speed and walking rate increased. Functional Independence Measure score increased from 58 to 79, and Euro QOL 5 score increased from 0.419 to 0.768. As previously reported in cases of post-stroke pain and motor weakness, rTMS together with physical therapy exerted measurable beneficial effects on intractable pain and motor weakness caused by spinal orthodontic fixation.