Ke Sun, Guangwen Zhou, Zhiye Jiang, Longjian Wang, Guanjie Wei, Honggang Wang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: This study was to evaluate the initial efficacy of lateral lumbar interbody fusion (LLIF) in treating degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis (DLSS), encompassing a spectrum of stenosis severity from minor to extreme cases.
Methods: This retrospective study analyzed the outcomes of 43 patients with DLSS, involving 55 surgical segments, who underwent LLIF. Clinical efficacy and radiographic parameters were recorded during the perioperative period and at the final follow-up. Pursuant to the Schizas' classification criteria, the 55 surgical segments were categorized into two groups: the Schizas grade A or B (AB) group and the C or D (CD) group. Simultaneously, the 43 patients were divided into two groups: the minor-moderate stenosis (MM) group and the severe-extreme stenosis (SE) group. Comparative analyses were subsequently conducted.
Results: All patients successfully underwent the LLIF procedure, without need for additional posterior decompression surgery. Both 16 MM and 27 SE group patients demonstrated significant improvements in clinical efficacy scores compared to their preoperative baselines (P<0.001). Furthermore, there were no statistically significant differences between the MM group and the SE group in postoperative clinical metrics (P>0.05). Both 23 AB and 32 CD group segments exhibited significant postoperative improvements in radiographic parameter values (P<0.001), with no statistically significant differences between the two groups (P>0.05).
Conclusions: Under certain indications, patients with varying degrees of DLSS, ranging from mild to extreme, can achieve favorable outcomes through LLIF, and preoperative imaging revealing severe or extreme stenosis does not automatically disqualify patients from undergoing indirect decompression surgery.
期刊介绍:
World Neurosurgery has an open access mirror journal World Neurosurgery: X, sharing the same aims and scope, editorial team, submission system and rigorous peer review.
The journal''s mission is to:
-To provide a first-class international forum and a 2-way conduit for dialogue that is relevant to neurosurgeons and providers who care for neurosurgery patients. The categories of the exchanged information include clinical and basic science, as well as global information that provide social, political, educational, economic, cultural or societal insights and knowledge that are of significance and relevance to worldwide neurosurgery patient care.
-To act as a primary intellectual catalyst for the stimulation of creativity, the creation of new knowledge, and the enhancement of quality neurosurgical care worldwide.
-To provide a forum for communication that enriches the lives of all neurosurgeons and their colleagues; and, in so doing, enriches the lives of their patients.
Topics to be addressed in World Neurosurgery include: EDUCATION, ECONOMICS, RESEARCH, POLITICS, HISTORY, CULTURE, CLINICAL SCIENCE, LABORATORY SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, OPERATIVE TECHNIQUES, CLINICAL IMAGES, VIDEOS