Nater Anick, Murray Jean-Christophe, Martin Allan R, Nouri Aria, Tetreault Lindsay, Fehlings Michael G
Division of Neurosurgery, Toronto Western Hospital, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Division of Surgery, University of Toronto Spine Program, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
World Neurosurg. 2017 Sep;105:720-727. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2017.06.029. Epub 2017 Jun 16.
There is no standardized approach to assess and manage perioperative neurologic deficit (PND) in patients undergoing spinal surgery. This survey aimed to evaluate the awareness and usage of clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) as well as investigate how surgeons performing spine surgeries feel about and manage PND and how they perceive the value of developing CPGs for the management of PND.
An invitation to participate was sent to the AOSpine International community. Questions were related to the awareness, usage of CPGs, and demographics. Results from the entire sample and subgroups were analyzed.
Of 770 respondents, 659 (85.6%) reported being aware of the existence of guideline(s), and among those, 578 (87.7%) acknowledged using guideline(s). Overall, 58.8% of surgeons reported not feeling comfortable managing a patient who wakes up quadriplegic after an uneventful multilevel posterior cervical decompression with instrumented fusion. Although 22.9% would consider an immediate return to the operating room, the other 77.1% favored conducting some kind of investigation/medical intervention first, such as performing magnetic resonance imaging (85.9%), administrating high-dose corticosteroids (50.2%), or increasing the mean arterial pressure (44.7%). Overall, 90.6% of surgeons believed that CPGs for the management of PND would be useful and 94.4% would be either likely or extremely likely to use these CPGs in their clinical practice.
Most respondents are aware and routinely use CPGs in their practice. Most surgeons performing spine surgeries reported not feeling comfortable managing PND. However, they highly value the creation and are likely to use CPGs in its management.
对于接受脊柱手术的患者,目前尚无标准化的方法来评估和管理围手术期神经功能缺损(PND)。本次调查旨在评估临床实践指南(CPG)的知晓度和使用情况,以及调查进行脊柱手术的外科医生对PND的看法和管理方式,以及他们如何看待制定PND管理CPG的价值。
向国际脊柱学会(AOSpine)社区发出参与邀请。问题涉及CPG的知晓度、使用情况以及人口统计学信息。对整个样本和亚组的结果进行了分析。
在770名受访者中,659人(85.6%)报告知晓指南的存在,其中578人(87.7%)承认使用过指南。总体而言,58.8%的外科医生表示,对于在经历了顺利的多节段后路颈椎减压并进行器械融合手术后醒来出现四肢瘫痪的患者,他们在管理上感到不自在。尽管22.9%的医生会考虑立即返回手术室,但另外77.1%的医生更倾向于先进行某种检查/医学干预,如进行磁共振成像(85.9%)、给予大剂量皮质类固醇(50.2%)或提高平均动脉压(44.7%)。总体而言,90.6%的外科医生认为PND管理的CPG会有用,94.4%的医生表示在临床实践中很可能或极有可能使用这些CPG。
大多数受访者在实践中知晓并常规使用CPG。大多数进行脊柱手术的外科医生表示对管理PND感到不自在。然而,他们高度重视CPG的制定,并可能在管理中使用CPG。