1.Use of Parathyroid Hormone and Rehabilitation Reduces Subsequent Vertebral Body Fractures after Balloon Kyphoplasty
Masaki UENO ; Emi TORIUMI ; Aki YOSHII ; Yuki TABATA ; Takeshi FURUDATE ; Yusuke TAJIMA
Asian Spine Journal 2022;16(3):432-439
Methods:
This study enrolled 273 patients who underwent an initial BKP. To treat osteoporosis, parathyroid hormone (PTH) administration was started 1–2 weeks before BKP and continued for at least 6 months postoperatively. Corsets were applied for 3 months after the procedure. Rehabilitative interventions, including hip range-of-motion training, muscle strengthening exercises, and motion/posture instruction, were started from the preoperative assessment time point and resumed 3 hours postoperatively. Corsets were used in all patients. Therefore, no grouping based on corset use was performed. PTH was used in 180 patients, and they were divided into the following two groups: PTH user group and PTH nonuser group. Rehabilitative interventions were provided to all patients for a median duration of 17 days. Patients who underwent rehabilitative intervention for <17 and ≥17 days were included in the short-term and long-term intervention groups, respectively. The incidences of SVBFs for these four groups were compared.
Results:
SVBF occurred in 29 patients (10.6%). The SVBF incidence among patients who were prescribed all three prophylactic measures was 6.2%. The PTH user group had a significantly lower incidence of distant vertebral body fractures as compared to the PTH nonuser group. The long-term rehabilitation group had a significantly lower incidence of SVBFs and adjacent vertebral body fractures within 50 postoperative days than the short-term group.
Conclusions
A 17-day or longer rehabilitative intervention may lower the risk of early adjacent vertebral body fractures, and the use of PTH may reduce the risk of distant vertebral body fractures.
2.An Update of Sports Medicine in Persons with Disabilities—Surviving Skeleton Muscles are Endocrine Organs—
Fumihiro TAJIMA ; Kazunari FURUSAWA ; Taro NAKAMURA ; Hidenobu OKUMA ; Yuichi UMEZU ; Makoto IDE ; Takashi MIZUSHIMA ; Mari UETA ; Takeshi NAKAMURA ; Takamitsu KAWAZU ; Hideki ARAKAWA ; Tomoyuki ITO ; Midori YAMANAKA ; Ken KOUDA ; Masaki GOTO ; Yusuke SASAKI ; Nami KANNO ; Takashi KAWASAKI ; Yasunori UMEMOTO ; Tomoya SHIMOMATSU ; Motohiko BANNO ; Hiroyasu UENISHI ; Hiroyuki OKAWA ; Ko ASAYAMA
The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine 2010;47(5):304-309