Department of Neurosurgery, Thomas Jefferson University Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA 19107, USA.
Spine J. 2010 Jul;10(7):581-7. doi: 10.1016/j.spinee.2010.03.001. Epub 2010 Apr 20.
The correlation between obesity and incidence of complications in spine surgery is unclear, with some reports suggesting linear relationships between body mass index (BMI) and complication incidence and others noting no relationship.
The purpose of this article was to assess the relationship between obesity and occurrence of perioperative complications in an elective thoracolumbar surgery cohort.
STUDY DESIGN/SETTING: Prospective observational cohort study at a tertiary care facility.
Cohort of 87 consecutive patients undergoing elective surgery for degenerative thoracolumbar pathologies over a 6-month period (May to December 2008).
Incidence of perioperative complications (those occurring within 30 days of surgery).
A prospective assessment of perioperative spine surgery complications was completed, and data were prospectively entered into a central database. Two independent auditors assessed for the presence and severity of perioperative complications. Previously validated binary definitions of major and minor complications were used. Patient data and early complications (those occurring within 30 days of index surgery) were analyzed using multivariate regression.
Mean BMI in this cohort was 31.3; 40.8% of patients were obese (BMI>30) and 10 patients (11.5%) were morbidly obese (BMI>40). The overall complication incidence was 67%. Minor complications occurred in 50% of patients, and major complications occurred in 17.8% of patients. No positioning palsies occurred in this series. Age correlated with an increase in complication risk (p=.006) as did hypertension (p=.004) and performance of a fusion (p<.0001). BMI did not correlate with the incidence of minor, major, or any complications (p=.58).
This prospective assessment of perioperative complications in elective degenerative thoracolumbar procedures shows no relationship between patient BMI and the incidence of perioperative minor or major complications. Specific care in perioperative positioning may limit the risk of perioperative positioning palsies in obese patients.
肥胖与脊柱手术并发症的发生之间的相关性尚不清楚,一些报告表明体重指数(BMI)与并发症发生率之间存在线性关系,而另一些报告则表明两者之间没有关系。
本文旨在评估肥胖与择期胸腰椎手术队列中围手术期并发症发生之间的关系。
研究设计/设置:三级保健机构的前瞻性观察队列研究。
在 6 个月的时间内(2008 年 5 月至 12 月),连续 87 例接受退行性胸腰椎病变择期手术的患者。
围手术期并发症(术后 30 天内发生的并发症)的发生率。
对围手术期脊柱手术并发症进行了前瞻性评估,并将数据前瞻性地输入中央数据库。两名独立审核员评估了围手术期并发症的存在和严重程度。使用先前验证的主要和次要并发症的二进制定义。使用多元回归分析患者数据和早期并发症(术后 30 天内发生的并发症)。
该队列的平均 BMI 为 31.3;40.8%的患者肥胖(BMI>30),10 名患者(11.5%)为病态肥胖(BMI>40)。总的并发症发生率为 67%。50%的患者发生轻微并发症,17.8%的患者发生严重并发症。本系列中未发生定位性瘫痪。年龄与并发症风险增加相关(p=.006),高血压(p=.004)和融合术(p<.0001)也是如此。BMI 与轻微、严重或任何并发症的发生率均无相关性(p=.58)。
这项对择期退行性胸腰椎手术围手术期并发症的前瞻性评估表明,患者 BMI 与围手术期轻微或严重并发症的发生率之间没有关系。围手术期定位时特别注意可能会限制肥胖患者围手术期定位性瘫痪的风险。