Fong Alex M, Duculan Roland, Endo Yoshimi, Carrino John A, Cammisa Frank P, Sama Andrew A, Hughes Alexander P, Lebl Darren R, Farmer James C, Huang Russel C, Sandhu Harvinder S, Mancuso Carol A, Girardi Federico P
Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, NY.
Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2023 Feb 1;48(3):E33-E39. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0000000000004483. Epub 2022 Sep 16.
Cross-sectional preoperative and intraoperative imaging study of L4-L5 lumbar degenerative spondylolisthesis (LDS).
To determine if alternate imaging modalities would identify LDS instability that did not meet the criteria for instability based on comparison of flexion and extension radiographs.
Pain may limit full flexion and extension maneuvers and thereby lead to underreporting of true dynamic translation and angulation in LDS. Alternate imaging pairs may identify instability missed by flexion-extension.
Consecutive patients scheduled for surgery for single-level L4-L5 LDS had preoperative standing radiographs in the lateral, flexion, and extension positions, supine computed tomography (CT) scans, and intraoperative fluoroscopic images in the supine and prone positions after anesthesia but before incision. Instability was defined as translation ≥3.5 mm or angulation ≥11° between the following pairs of images: (1) flexion-extension; (2) CT-lateral; (3) lateral-intraoperative supine; (4) lateral-intraoperative prone; and (5) intraoperative supine-prone.
Of 240 patients (mean age 68 y, 54% women) 15 (6%) met the criteria for instability by flexion-extension, and 225 were classified as stable. Of these 225, another 84 patients (35% of total enrollment) were reclassified as unstable by comparison of CT-lateral images (21 patients) and by lateral-intraoperative images (63 patients). Nine of the 15 patients diagnosed with instability by flexion-extension had fusion (60%), and 68 of the 84 patients reclassified as unstable by other imaging pairs had fusion (81%) ( P =0.07). The 84 reclassified patients were more likely to undergo fusion compared with the 141 patients who persistently remained classified as stable (odds ratio=2.6, 95% CI: 1.4-4.9, P =0.004).
Our study provides evidence that flexion and extension radiographs underreport the dynamic extent of LDS and therefore should not be solely relied upon to ascertain instability. These findings have implications for how instability should be established and the extent of surgery that is indicated.
L4-L5腰椎退行性椎体滑脱(LDS)的术前和术中横断面影像学研究。
基于屈伸位X线片比较,确定替代影像学检查方法能否识别不符合不稳定标准的LDS不稳定情况。
疼痛可能会限制充分的屈伸动作,从而导致LDS中真正的动态移位和角度变化报告不足。替代影像学检查组合可能会识别出屈伸位检查遗漏的不稳定情况。
计划接受单节段L4-L5 LDS手术的连续患者,术前行站立位侧位、屈伸位X线片检查,仰卧位计算机断层扫描(CT),以及麻醉后但切开前仰卧位和俯卧位的术中透视图像检查。不稳定定义为以下影像对之间的移位≥3.5 mm或角度≥11°:(1)屈伸位;(2)CT-侧位;(3)侧位-术中仰卧位;(4)侧位-术中俯卧位;(5)术中仰卧位-俯卧位。
240例患者(平均年龄68岁,54%为女性)中,15例(6%)符合屈伸位不稳定标准,225例被分类为稳定。在这225例中,另外84例患者(占总入组人数的35%)通过CT-侧位影像比较(21例)和术中侧位影像(63例)重新分类为不稳定。15例经屈伸位诊断为不稳定的患者中有9例进行了融合手术(60%),84例经其他影像对重新分类为不稳定的患者中有68例进行了融合手术(81%)(P=0.07)。与141例持续被分类为稳定的患者相比,84例重新分类的患者更有可能接受融合手术(比值比=2.6,95%可信区间:1.4-4.9,P=0.004)。
我们的研究提供了证据,表明屈伸位X线片低估了LDS的动态程度,因此不应仅依靠其来确定不稳定情况。这些发现对确定不稳定情况的方式以及所指示的手术范围具有启示意义。