| Literature DB >> 30470939 |
Tetsuya Abe1,2, Yosuke Shibao3, Yosuke Takeuchi3, Yuki Mataki3, Kuniaki Amano4, Shigeru Hioki4, Kousei Miura3, Hiroshi Noguchi3, Toru Funayama3, Masao Koda3, Masashi Yamazaki3.
Abstract
We assessed the safety and feasibility of a unified conservative treatment protocol for osteoporotic vertebral fractures in the elderly patients with a 24-week follow-up. Our results showed that initial hospitalization with rigorous bed rest followed by a rehabilitation program using a Jewett brace was safe and feasible in managing patients.Entities:
Keywords: Bed rest; Conservative treatment; Elderly; Osteoporotic vertebral fracture
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30470939 PMCID: PMC6267386 DOI: 10.1007/s11657-018-0547-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Osteoporos Impact factor: 2.617
Fig. 1Flow diagram for patient enrollment and follow-up of the 186 OVF patients admitted, 32 patients were excluded. Therefore 154 patients were included to this study. Among them, 11 patients underwent early surgery within first 2 weeks after admission and 19 patients lost follow-up for 6~8-week and/or 24-week assessment. Finally, 124 patients were analyzed at 24-week follow-up visit
Fig. 2Defining vertebral instability. It was calculated as the difference (absolute value) of the vertebral wedging angle between standing (a) and supine (b) position. The difference in the angle formed by drawing a perpendicular line along the superior and inferior endplates of the fractured vertebra and measuring the intersection looking at the difference between this measurement in a supine position and a standing position
Demographic data of patients with osteoporotic vertebral fractures (n = 154)
| Sex (male: female) | 22: 132 |
| History of trauma | 68 (44.2%) |
| Leg pain | 7 (4.5%) |
| Visit by ambulance | 46 (30.0%) |
| Previous osteoporosis medication | 34 (22.1%) |
| Past history of OVF | 28 (18.2%) |
| Use of steroids | 7 (4.5%) |
| Dementing disorder | 13 (13.0%) |
| Lost to follow-up (drop-out) | 19 (12.3%) |
OVF, osteoporotic vertebral fracture
Fig. 3Clinical outcomes at 24-week assessment according to the affected levels (n = 124). All patients had vertebral fracture at a single level. Six patients had leg pain due to vertebral fractures and its instability at L2 in 1 patient, L4 in 4 patients, and L5 in 1 patient. Osteoporotic vertebral fracture and delayed union mainly occurred at thoracolumbar levels (T11-L1) in 73 patients (58.9%) and 12 patients (75%), respectively
Surgical intervention group (n = 10)
| Days after admission | Mean 39.6 days (28~80 days) |
| Vertebral instability | Mean 10.8°(5.7~17.7°) |
| MRI (T2-weighted intensity) | |
| Confined high | 6 cases |
| Confined low | 2 cases |
| Diffuse low | 2 cases |
| Middle column injury (CT) | |
| + | 8 cases |
| − | 2 cases |
| Surgeries | |
| BKP | 7 cases |
| VP + PLF | 3 cases |
| Ambulatory status | |
| Improve | 1 case |
| Worsen | 3 cases |
| No change | 6 cases |
BKP, Balloon Kyphoplasty; VP, vertebroplasty; PLF, posterolateral fusion
Risk factors for failure of conservative treatment of osteoporotic vertebral fractures
| Univariate analysis | |
| Age | 0.15 |
| Sex | 0.7 |
| BMI | 0.097 |
| History of trauma | 0.026# |
| Leg pain | 0.85 |
| Visit by ambulance | 0.89 |
| Previous osteoporosis medication | 0.45 |
| Past OVF history | 0.56 |
| Use of steroids | 0.55 |
| Vertebral instability on X-ray | 0.0002# |
| T2WI confined high on MRI | 0.0001# |
| Middle column injury on CT | 0.25 |
| Stepwise logistic regression | |
| History of trauma | 0.096 |
| Vertebral instability (X-ray) | 0.0024* |
| T2WI confined high (MRI) | 0.0016* |
BMI, body mass index; CT, computed tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; T2WI, T2-weighted images