Patient Recovery Following Uniportal Endoscopic Vs Open Lumbar Spine Surgery: Objective Analysis of Postoperative Mobility and Gait Patterns Using Wearable Sensors.

IF 1.7 Q2 SURGERY International Journal of Spine Surgery Pub Date : 2025-03-06 DOI:10.14444/8718
Alison Ma, Ralph J Mobbs, Monish M Maharaj
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Abstract

Background: There has been a gradual shift from open spine surgery to minimally invasive techniques such as endoscopic spine surgery to reduce approach-related trauma, collateral damage, and complications. While recovery following surgery has been measured using subjective measures including patient-reported outcome measures, the introduction of smart wearable devices now provides both an objective and continuous method of patient assessment. This prospective study compares patient recovery after uniportal endoscopic and open lumbar spine surgery by analyzing mobility and gait metrics captured by a wearable sensor.

Methods: Participants included 24 patients who underwent a single-level uniportal endoscopic lumbar decompression or open posterior lumbar fusion. During the first 48 hours after surgery, patients wore a sensor that continuously monitored position, step count, and gait metrics.

Results: In the immediate postoperative period, endoscopic spine surgery patients experienced a quicker return to mobility, with less time lying down, higher step count, faster gait velocity, lower double support percentage, and reduced variability, compared with open spine surgery patients.

Conclusion: There are key differences in patient mobility and gait following uniportal endoscopic and open spine surgery. Endoscopic spine surgery patients had faster recovery, which can guide resource allocation toward the development of training programs and support the advancement of spine endoscopy to address a broader range of pathologies. This pilot study highlights the potential for wearable devices to be used in further studies to form spine surgery recovery trajectories, allowing targeted rehabilitation and prompt intervention for deviations in patient recovery.

Clinical relevance: This study demonstrates the benefits of endoscopic spine surgery for improved postoperative recovery in terms of mobility and gait metrics. Additionally, it highlights the potential for wearable sensor technology to provide an objective and continuous method for assessing postoperative outcomes and for the development of individualized rehabilitation protocols. These findings support the broader adoption of endoscopic techniques and emphasize the value of incorporating wearable devices into postoperative monitoring to optimize patient care.

Level of evidence: 3:

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单门静脉内窥镜与开放式腰椎手术后患者的恢复:使用可穿戴传感器对术后活动能力和步态模式的客观分析。
背景:为了减少入路相关的创伤、附带损伤和并发症,人们逐渐从开放脊柱手术转向微创技术,如内窥镜脊柱手术。虽然手术后的恢复是通过主观指标来衡量的,包括患者报告的结果指标,但智能可穿戴设备的引入现在提供了一种客观和连续的患者评估方法。这项前瞻性研究通过分析可穿戴传感器捕获的移动性和步态指标,比较了单门静脉内窥镜和开放腰椎手术后患者的恢复情况。方法:参与者包括24例接受单节段单门内镜腰椎减压或开放后路腰椎融合术的患者。在手术后的48小时内,患者佩戴一个传感器,持续监测位置、步数和步态指标。结果:与开放式脊柱手术患者相比,内镜下脊柱手术患者术后立即恢复活动能力更快,躺卧时间更短,步数更高,步态速度更快,双支撑百分比更低,变异性更小。结论:单门静脉内窥镜手术和开放脊柱手术后患者的活动能力和步态存在关键差异。内窥镜脊柱手术患者恢复更快,这可以指导资源分配到培训计划的发展,并支持脊柱内窥镜技术的发展,以解决更广泛的病理问题。这项初步研究强调了可穿戴设备在进一步研究中用于形成脊柱手术恢复轨迹的潜力,允许有针对性的康复和对患者恢复偏差的及时干预。临床相关性:本研究证明了内窥镜脊柱手术在改善活动能力和步态指标方面的术后恢复的益处。此外,它强调了可穿戴传感器技术的潜力,为评估术后结果和个性化康复方案的发展提供了客观和连续的方法。这些发现支持内窥镜技术的广泛采用,并强调将可穿戴设备纳入术后监测以优化患者护理的价值。证据等级:3;
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
162
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Spine Surgery is the official scientific journal of ISASS, the International Intradiscal Therapy Society, the Pittsburgh Spine Summit, and the Büttner-Janz Spinefoundation, and is an official partner of the Southern Neurosurgical Society. The goal of the International Journal of Spine Surgery is to promote and disseminate online the most up-to-date scientific and clinical research into innovations in motion preservation and new spinal surgery technology, including basic science, biologics, and tissue engineering. The Journal is dedicated to educating spine surgeons worldwide by reporting on the scientific basis, indications, surgical techniques, complications, outcomes, and follow-up data for promising spinal procedures.
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