Literature DB >> 18352831

Laminectomy and fusion after spinal cord injury: national inpatient complications and outcomes.

Maxwell Boakye1, Chirag G Patil, Justin Santarelli, Chris Ho, Wendy Tian, Shivanand P Lad.   

Abstract

There is little information about national in-hospital complication rates, adverse outcomes, and mortality after spinal fusion for spinal cord injury (SCI). The National Inpatient Sample (NIS) was utilized to identify 31,381 admissions of acute spinal cord injured patients who underwent spinal decompression with laminectomy and/or fusion (lam/fusion) in the United States from 1993 to 2002. Multivariate analysis was performed to analyze the effects of patient and hospital characteristics on outcomes such as mortality, complications, and discharge disposition, which were then stratified by age, level, and type of injury. The overall mortality was 3.0%, with a complication rate of 26.3% and mean length of stay (LOS) of 17 days. Pulmonary complications (14.4%) and postoperative hemorrhages or hematomas (3.8%) were the most common complications reported. One postoperative complication doubled the length of stay, increased the mortality rate by fivefold and added over $50,000 to hospital charges. Age and comorbidities were the main significant predictors of mortality on multivariate analysis. Patients aged >85 or 65-84 had a 44- and 14-fold greater risk of dying compared with patients in the 18-44 age group respectively. Patients with >3 comorbidities also had an increased risk of mortality (odds ratio [OR] = 1.8). Alcohol abuse was the most common medical comorbidity (present in 12% of patients treated). This study represents the first major national estimate of in-hospital mortality and complication rates after nonoperative and operative treatment for SCI.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18352831     DOI: 10.1089/neu.2007.0395

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurotrauma        ISSN: 0897-7151            Impact factor:   5.269


  3 in total

1.  Preinjury alcohol and drug use among persons with spinal cord injury: implications for rehabilitation.

Authors:  Michael W Stroud; Charles H Bombardier; Joshua R Dyer; Carl T Rimmele; Peter C Esselman
Journal:  J Spinal Cord Med       Date:  2011       Impact factor: 1.985

2.  Baseline predictors of in-hospital mortality after acute traumatic spinal cord injury: data from a level I trauma center.

Authors:  Christian Blex; Martin Kreutzträger; Johanna Ludwig; Claus Peter Nowak; Jan M Schwab; Tom Lübstorf; Axel Ekkernkamp; Marcel A Kopp; Thomas Liebscher
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-07-06       Impact factor: 4.996

3.  Demographics and Outcomes of Spine Surgery in Octogenarians and Nonagenarians: A Comparison of the National Inpatient Sample, MarketScan and National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Databases.

Authors:  Siddharth Bhargava; Mayur Sharma; Nicholas Dietz; Joseph Dettori; Beatrice Ugiliweneza; Miriam Nuno; Maxwell Boakye; Doniel Drazin
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2019-11-19
  3 in total

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