Literature DB >> 29807180

Decompression for Traumatic Thoracic/Thoracolumbar Incomplete Spinal Cord Injury: Application of AO Spine Injury Classification System to Identify the Timing of Operation.

Jin Peng Du1, Yong Fan2, Ji Jun Liu2, Jia Nan Zhang2, Yi Bin Meng2, Chen Chen Mu2, Ding Jun Hao3.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Application of AO spine injury classification system (AOSICS) to identify the timing of operation for different types of traumatic thoracic/thoracolumbar incomplete spinal cord injury (SCI).
METHODS: A single-center prospective cohort study was conducted to enroll patients with thoracic/thoracolumbar incomplete SCI from April 2013 to November 2016; they were divided into an early group (<24 hours after SCI) and a late group (24-72 hours after SCI). Each group was divided into A, B, C subgroups according to AOSICS. The primary outcomes were ordinal changes in ASIA Impairment Scale at 12-month follow-up. The secondary outcomes included the Medical outcomes study 36-term short form health survey physical component summary (PCS), complications, mortality, and hospital length of stay (LOS).
RESULTS: Seven hundred twenty-one patients with thoracic/thoracolumbar incomplete SCI were included; 335 patients underwent early surgery, and 386 patients underwent delayed surgery. Statistical results included the following comparisons of the early versus late groups: AIS improvement of 1 grade or more (combined groups: P = 0.009, odds ratio [OR] = 1.487; A: P = 0.777, OR = 1.072; B: P = 0.029, OR = 1.701; C: P = 0.007, OR = 1.762), AIS improvement 2 grades or more (combined groups: P = 0.002, OR = 2.471; A: P = 0.189, OR = 3.939; B: P = 0.011, OR = 2.550; C: P = 0.035, OR = 3.964) and PCS (combined groups: P = 0.327; A: P = 0.776; B: P = 0.019; C: P = 0.562). LOS (combined groups: P < 0.0001; A, B and C: P < 0.0001). Complications (combined groups: P = 0.267; A: P = 0.830; B: P = 0.111; C: P = 0.757).
CONCLUSIONS: Patients with type-A injuries with incomplete SCI do not have to undergo aggressive early operations. Patients with type-B and type-C injuries should undergo an operation early to achieve better clinical results.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  AO spine; Spinal cord injury; Thoracic/thoracolumbar fracture; Timing of operation

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29807180     DOI: 10.1016/j.wneu.2018.05.118

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  World Neurosurg        ISSN: 1878-8750            Impact factor:   2.104


  4 in total

1.  Timing of Surgery in Thoracolumbar Spine Injury: Impact on Neurological Outcome.

Authors:  Irfan Qadir; K Daniel Riew; Syed Roman Alam; Rizwan Akram; Muhammad Waqas; Amer Aziz
Journal:  Global Spine J       Date:  2019-09-16

2.  Complete Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury: Current Insights Regarding Timing of Surgery and Level of Injury.

Authors:  Paula Valerie Ter Wengel; Yvette De Haan; Ricardo E Feller; F Cumhur Oner; William Peter Vandertop
Journal:  Global Spine J       Date:  2019-05-01

Review 3.  The Predictive Value of the Load Sharing Classification Concerning Sagittal Collapse and Posterior Instrumentation Failure: A Systematic Literature Review.

Authors:  Wessel T Stam; Jaap Deunk; Matthijs J Elzinga; Frank W Bloemers; Georgios F Giannakopoulos
Journal:  Global Spine J       Date:  2019-06-16

4.  A Randomized Controlled Trial of Early versus Late Surgical Decompression for Thoracic and Thoracolumbar Spinal Cord Injury in 73 Patients.

Authors:  Ali Haghnegahdar; Reza Behjat; Soheil Saadat; Jetan Badhiwala; Majid Reza Farrokhi; Amin Niakan; Keyvan Eghbal; Ehsan Barzideh; Abtin Shahlaee; Fariborz Ghaffarpasand; Zahra Ghodsi; Alexander R Vaccaro; Mohsen Sadeghi-Naini; Michael G Fehlings; James David Guest; Pegah Derakhshan; Vafa Rahimi-Movaghar
Journal:  Neurotrauma Rep       Date:  2020-09-18
  4 in total

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