1. Microsurgical unilateral laminotomy for decompression of lumbar spinal stenosis: long-term results and predictive factors
- Author
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Marco Stein, Nina Vogt, Thomas Steingrüber, Karsten Schöller, Jörn Pons-Kühnemann, Eberhard Uhl, and Tilman Müller
- Subjects
Male ,Reoperation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Spinal stenosis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Neurogenic claudication ,Laminotomy ,03 medical and health sciences ,Postoperative Complications ,Spinal Stenosis ,0302 clinical medicine ,Lumbar ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Aged ,Lumbar Vertebrae ,business.industry ,Laminectomy ,Lumbar spinal stenosis ,Middle Aged ,Decompression, Surgical ,medicine.disease ,Spondylolisthesis ,Surgery ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,medicine.symptom ,Claudication ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The microsurgical unilateral laminotomy (MUL) technique for bilateral decompression of lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) is a less destabilizing alternative to laminectomy and leads to good short-term outcomes. However, little is known about the long-term results including predictive factors. Medical records of patients who underwent MUL for LSS decompression between 2005 and 2010 were reviewed, and a questionnaire was distributed to complement the long-term outcome data. The study population consisted of 176 patients including 17 patients with stable grade I spondylolisthesis. Complications and reoperations were meticulously analyzed. Clinical outcome was measured using a modified Prolo scale and was further dichotomized in good vs. poor outcome. Predictive factors were obtained from uni- and multivariate analyses. The median age of the cohort was 70.0 years and the follow-up 71.7 months. Complications occurred in 5.1 % of the patients. The overall reoperation rate was 17.0 %, including surgery, which was exclusively performed at other levels in 4.0 %. The reoperation rate for fusion was 4.5 %. Good neurogenic claudication outcome faded from 98.3 % at hospital discharge to 47.2 % at 6 years. Multivariate analysis identified previous lumbar operation as a potential independent predictor of a reoperation; potential independent predictors of poor long-term claudication outcome were older age, female gender, higher body mass index (BMI) and tobacco smoking. In our experience, the long-term reoperation rate after MUL for LSS is not negligible and higher in previously operated patients. It seems like the good initial clinical results after MUL may fade over time, and several patient-related predictive factors including potentially modifiable obesity and tobacco smoking seem to play an important role.
- Published
- 2016
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