Shriver Michael F, Zeer Valerie, Alentado Vincent J, Mroz Thomas E, Benzel Edward C, Steinmetz Michael P
Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine;
Center for Spine Health, and.
Neurosurg Focus. 2015 Oct;39(4):E16. doi: 10.3171/2015.7.FOCUS15268.
OBJECT There are a variety of surgical positions that provide optimal exposure of the dorsal lumbar spine. These include the prone, kneeling, knee-chest, knee-elbow, and lateral decubitus positions. All are positions that facilitate exposure of the spine. Each position, however, is associated with an array of unique complications that result from excessive pressure applied to the torso or extremities. The authors reviewed clinical studies reporting complications that arose from positioning of the patient during dorsal exposures of the lumbar spine. METHODS MEDLINE, Scopus, and Web of Science database searches were performed to find clinical studies reporting complications associated with positioning during lumbar spine surgery. For articles meeting inclusion criteria, the following information was obtained: publication year, study design, sample size, age, operative time, type of surgery, surgical position, frame or table type, complications associated with positioning, time to first observed complication, long-term outcomes, and evidence-based recommendations for complication avoidance. RESULTS Of 3898 articles retrieved from MEDLINE, Scopus, and Web of Science, 34 met inclusion criteria. Twenty-four studies reported complications associated with use of the prone position, and 7 studies investigated complications after knee-chest positioning. Complications associated with the knee-elbow, lateral decubitus, and supine positions were each reported by a single study. Vision loss was the most commonly reported complication for both prone and knee-chest positioning. Several other complications were reported, including conjunctival swelling, Ischemic orbital compartment syndrome, nerve palsies, thromboembolic complications, pressure sores, lower extremity compartment syndrome, and shoulder dislocation, highlighting the assortment of possible complications following different surgical positions. For prone-position studies, there was a relationship between increased operation time and position complications. Only 3 prone-position studies reported complications following procedures of less than 120 minutes, 7 studies reported complications following mean operative times of 121-240 minutes, and 9 additional studies reported complications following mean operative times greater than 240 minutes. This relationship was not observed for knee-chest and other surgical positions. CONCLUSIONS This work presents a systematic review of positioning-related complications following prone, knee-chest, and other positions used for lumbar spine surgery. Numerous evidence-based recommendations for avoidance of these potentially severe complications associated with intraoperative positioning are discussed. This investigation may serve as a framework to educate the surgical team and decrease rates of intraoperative positioning complications.
目的 有多种手术体位可实现腰椎背侧的最佳暴露。这些体位包括俯卧位、跪位、膝胸位、膝肘位和侧卧位。所有这些体位都有助于脊柱暴露。然而,每个体位都与一系列因对躯干或四肢施加过大压力而导致的独特并发症相关。作者回顾了报告腰椎背侧暴露期间患者体位引起的并发症的临床研究。方法 对MEDLINE、Scopus和科学网数据库进行检索,以查找报告腰椎手术期间体位相关并发症的临床研究。对于符合纳入标准的文章,获取了以下信息:发表年份、研究设计、样本量、年龄、手术时间、手术类型、手术体位、框架或手术台类型、与体位相关的并发症、首次观察到并发症的时间、长期结局以及避免并发症的循证建议。结果 从MEDLINE、Scopus和科学网检索到的3898篇文章中,34篇符合纳入标准。24项研究报告了与俯卧位使用相关的并发症,7项研究调查了膝胸位后的并发症。与膝肘位、侧卧位和仰卧位相关的并发症各有1项研究报告。视力丧失是俯卧位和膝胸位最常报告的并发症。还报告了其他几种并发症,包括结膜肿胀、缺血性眼眶间隔综合征、神经麻痹、血栓栓塞并发症、压疮、下肢间隔综合征和肩关节脱位,突出了不同手术体位后可能出现的各种并发症。对于俯卧位研究,手术时间延长与体位并发症之间存在关联。只有3项俯卧位研究报告了手术时间少于120分钟的手术的并发症,7项研究报告了平均手术时间为121 - 240分钟的手术的并发症,另外9项研究报告了平均手术时间大于240分钟的手术的并发症。膝胸位和其他手术体位未观察到这种关联。结论 本研究对腰椎手术中俯卧位、膝胸位和其他体位后与体位相关的并发症进行了系统综述。讨论了许多基于证据的避免这些与术中体位相关的潜在严重并发症的建议。本调查可作为教育手术团队并降低术中体位并发症发生率的框架。