Ghobrial George M, Williams Kim A, Arnold Paul, Fehlings Michael, Harrop James S
Department of Neurological Surgery, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, 909 Walnut Street, 3rd Floor, Philadelphia, PA 19107, United States.
Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Kansas Medical Center, 3901 Rainbow Boulevard, Kansas City, KS 66160, United States.
Clin Neurol Neurosurg. 2015 Dec;139:76-80. doi: 10.1016/j.clineuro.2015.08.022. Epub 2015 Sep 1.
Iatrogenic neurologic deficits after lumbar spine surgery are rare complications, but important to recognize and manage. Complications such as radiculopathy, spinal cord compression, motor deficits (i.e. foot drop with L5 radiculopathy), and new onset radiculitis, while uncommon do occur. Attempts at mitigating these complications with the use of neuromonitoring have been successful. Guidance in the literature as to the true rate of iatrogenic neurologic deficit is limited to several case studies and retrospective designed studies describing the management, prevention and treatment of these deficits. The authors review the lumbar spinal surgery literature to examine the incidence of iatrogenic neurologic deficit in the lumbar spinal surgery literature. An advanced MEDLINE search conducted on May 14th, 2015 from January 1, 2004 through May 14, 2015, using the following MeSH search terms "postoperative complications," then subterms "lumbar vertebrae," treatment outcome," "spinal fusion," and "radiculopathy" were included together with "postoperative complications" in a single search. Postoperative complications including radiculopathy, weakness, and spinal cord compression were included. The definition of iatrogenic neurologic complication was limited to post-operative radiculopathy, motor weakness or new onset pain/radiculitis. An advanced MEDLINE search conducted on May 14th, 2015 using all of the above terms together yielded 21 results. After careful evaluation, 11 manuscripts were excluded and 10 were carefully reviewed. The most common indications for surgery were degenerative spondylolisthesis, spondylosis, scoliosis, and lumbar stenosis. In 2783 patients in 12 total studies, there were 56 patients who had reported a postoperative neurologic deficit for a rate of 5.7. The rates of deficits ranged from 0.46% to 17% in the studies used. The average rate of reported neurologic complications within these papers was 9% (range 0.46-24%). Thirty patients of a total of 731 (4.1%) had a new onset neurologic injury after anterior lumber interbody fusion or lateral lumber interbody fusion. Thirty-seven out of 2052 (1.9%) patients had a neurologic injury after posterior decompression and fusion. Screw malposition was responsible for 11 deficits. Spinal surgery for lumbar degenerative disease carries a low but definite rate of neurologic deficits. Despite the introduction of neuromonitoring, these complications still occur. Interpretation of neurologic injury rates for lumbar surgery is limited by the few prospective and cohort-matched controlled studies. Likewise, most injuries were associated with the placement of instrumentation despite the type of approach.
腰椎手术后的医源性神经功能缺损是罕见的并发症,但识别和处理这些并发症很重要。诸如神经根病、脊髓压迫、运动功能缺损(如L5神经根病导致的足下垂)和新发神经根炎等并发症虽然不常见,但确实会发生。使用神经监测来减轻这些并发症的尝试已取得成功。文献中关于医源性神经功能缺损的真实发生率的指导仅限于一些病例研究以及描述这些缺损的处理、预防和治疗的回顾性设计研究。作者回顾了腰椎手术文献,以研究腰椎手术文献中医源性神经功能缺损的发生率。于2015年5月14日进行了一次高级MEDLINE检索,检索时间范围为2004年1月1日至2015年5月14日,使用以下医学主题词(MeSH)检索词:“术后并发症”,然后是子主题“腰椎”、“治疗结果”、“脊柱融合术”和“神经根病”,并将其与“术后并发症”一起纳入单次检索。纳入的术后并发症包括神经根病、无力和脊髓压迫。医源性神经并发症的定义仅限于术后神经根病、运动无力或新发疼痛/神经根炎。2015年5月14日使用上述所有检索词进行的高级MEDLINE检索共得到21条结果。经过仔细评估,排除了11篇手稿,对10篇进行了仔细审查。最常见的手术指征是退变性腰椎滑脱、脊柱退变、脊柱侧弯和腰椎管狭窄。在12项研究中的2783例患者中,有56例报告了术后神经功能缺损,发生率为5.7%。在所使用的研究中,缺损发生率在0.46%至17%之间。这些论文中报告的神经并发症的平均发生率为9%(范围为0.46% - 24%)。在总共731例患者中,有30例(4.1%)在腰椎前路椎间融合术或腰椎侧方椎间融合术后出现新发神经损伤。在2052例患者中,有37例(1.9%)在后路减压融合术后出现神经损伤。螺钉位置不当导致了11例神经功能缺损。腰椎退变性疾病的脊柱手术导致神经功能缺损的发生率较低但确切存在。尽管引入了神经监测,这些并发症仍然会发生。腰椎手术神经损伤发生率的解读受到前瞻性和队列匹配对照研究较少的限制。同样,尽管手术方式不同,但大多数损伤与器械置入有关。