Literature DB >> 8642028

Repair of a pseudarthrosis of the lumbar spine. A functional outcome study.

C T Carpenter1, J W Dietz, K Y Leung, D A Hanscom, T A Wagner.   

Abstract

Eighty-six patients had a total of eighty-eight primary attempts at repair of a pseudarthrosis that had developed after a localized arthrodesis in the lumbar spine. A follow-up questionnaire was sent to all patients at a mean of fifty-one months (range, twenty-five to seventy-eight months) after the operation; seventy-two patients (84 percent) completed to questionnaire. A solid fusion was ultimately achieved after the treatment of eighty-one (94 percent) of the eighty-six pseudarthroses for which radiographic data were available. With the numbers available, we could find no significant association between a solid fusion and the patient's age, gender, body-mass index, return to work, or outcome score. Despite the high rate of fusion after the index repair and subsequent procedures, only nineteen (26 percent) of the seventy-two patients who completed the questionnaire eventually had a good or excellent outcome. Seven (10 percent) had an excellent result (90 to 100 points), twelve (17 percent) had a good result (70 to 89 points), fourteen (19 percent) had a fair result (50 to 69 points), and thirty-nine (54 percent) had a poor result (less than 50 points). Nevertheless, fifty-one patients (71 percent) reported that the operation led to some improvement, and fifty-five (76 percent) said that they would have the operation again if the circumstances were similar to those before the repair of the pseudarthrosis. Thirty-four of the seventy-two patients were smokers and thirty-eight were non-smokers at the time of the operation. There was a negative linear association between the outcome scores and the number of pack-years (p = 0.02). Cessation of smoking before the operation positively affected the outcome; the patients who had stopped smoking had a mean outcome score of 65 points, compared with 45 points for those who had not stopped (p = 0.03). Patients who had stopped smoking were also more likely to return to work full time (p < 0.001). At the latest follow-up evaluation, twenty of the seventy-two patients had returned to full-time employment. Patients who had been receiving Workers' Compensation at the time of the operation generally did poorly on the outcome questionnaire, but, with the numbers available, they did not have a significantly different rate of solid fusion than patients who had not been receiving Workers' Compensation. Also, the outcome score and the rate of fusion were nor significantly affected by age or by obesity.

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Mesh:

Year:  1996        PMID: 8642028     DOI: 10.2106/00004623-199605000-00011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am        ISSN: 0021-9355            Impact factor:   5.284


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