1. Evaluation of surgical characteristics and clinical outcome of 11 patients with thoracic discectomy through transfacet approach
- Author
-
Talat Cem Ovalioglu
- Subjects
discectomy ,herniation ,spine ,thoracal ,transfacet ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Background: In thoracal disc herniation (TDH) requiring surgery, the size, level, anatomic location, and calcification of the disc are extremely important in the selection of the technique to be applied. Since the thoracic region does not allow spinal cord manipulation, the surgery is difficult and requires experience. A consecutive series of patients who underwent thoracic discectomy through a posterior transfacet approach is presented in this study. Methods: Eleven patients (6 men, and 5 women) underwent surgery at 12 disc levels. The mean age was 53.54 years (range 28-72 years). Patients presented with myelopathy (n = 8, 73%), radiculopathy (n = 7, 64%), back pain (n =10, 91%), and urinary dysfunction (n = 6, 55%). Seven (58%) lateral, 3 (25%) calcified, and 4 (33%) large disc herniations were revealed by preoperative imaging. The mean follow-up period was 21.02 ± 8.04 months (range 6 – 43 months). Results: A posterior transfacet approach was used for all eleven patients with TDH. Thoracic discectomy was performed at T11- 12 (36%) level for 4 patients, and equally at T10- 11 (36%) level for the other 4 patients. A bilateral approach with laminotomy was performed in one patient, and a two-level discectomy was performed in another patient. Unilateral partial laminectomy was added for 3 patients. The average operating time was 146.85 minutes (range 125-220 minutes). The average hospital stay was 4.2 days (range, 2- 13 days) while no neurological functional deterioration was observed in any of the patients after surgery. Postoperative 1-month and 6-month ODI scores were found significantly different from preoperative ODI scores in all patients. Conclusions: Thoracal discectomy through the posterior transfacet approach route is a safe and effective technique to achieve adequate decompression without requiring instrumented fusion.
- Published
- 2022