The spine journal : official journal of the North American Spine Society
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Narcotic use amongst patients suffering from lumbar radiculopathy is common, but the clinical benefit of narcotics for lumbar radiculopathy is likely minimal. It is unknown what the impact of preoperative use of narcotics has on outcomes related to lumbar microdiscectomy. ⋯ Our results demonstrate that patients that use opioids prior to lumbar microdiscectomy have equivalent postoperative outcomes as those that do not use opioids. Use of higher doses of opioids is associated with worse short-term outcomes.
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Outpatient postoperative pain management in spine patients, specifically involving the use of opioids, demonstrates significant variability. ⋯ We evaluated several predictive models for postoperative long-term opioid use in a large cohort of patients with LBP or LEP who underwent surgery. A regression-based model with high sensitivity and AUC is provided online to screen patients for high risk of long-term opioid use based on preoperative risk factors and opioid prescription patterns in the first 30 days after surgery. It is hoped that this work will improve identification of patients at high risk of prolonged opioid use and enable early intervention and counseling.
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Patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) are valuable tools for evaluating the success of spine surgery, with the Neck Disability Index (NDI) commonly used to assess pain-related disability. Recently, patient-reported outcomes measurement information system (PROMIS) has gained attention in its ability to measure PROs across general patient populations. However, PROMIS is not condition-specific so spine researchers are reluctant to incorporate it in place of common legacy measures. ⋯ Findings suggest accurate NDI scores can be derived from PROMIS-29 domains. Clinicians who want to move from NDI to PROMIS-29 can use this equation to obtain estimated NDI scores when only collecting PROMIS-29. These results support the use of PROMIS-29 in cervical surgery populations and underscore the idea that PROMIS-29 domains have the potential to replace disease-specific traditional PROMs.
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Observational Study
Incidence of bone loss after Prestige-LP cervical disc arthroplasty: a single-center retrospective study of 396 cases.
The development of bone loss (BL) at the operated level after cervical disc arthroplasty (CDA) has not been well recognized. The incidence of BL may be correlated with the prosthesis type. Currently, no study has reported the incidence of BL after CDA with the Prestige-LP disc, and this remains an active area of research. ⋯ BL was a common but self-limited phenomenon after CDA at the early postoperative stage. It occurred more often in relatively young age patients, two-level CDA, and C5/6 segment. However, patients suffering from BL showed no deterioration of the clinical outcomes, more exceptional motion preservation at the arthroplasty level, and lower incidence with a lower grade of HO.
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Detecting pseudarthrosis following spinal fusion is important for accurate diagnosis and treatment. Current diagnostic measures hold certain drawbacks. Radiostereometric analysis (RSA) is a radiographic technique with the capability to measure intervertebral segment changes and may be a novel way of assessing fusion. ⋯ The results from this work contribute to the accuracy, precision, and bead placements for studying RSA in cervical and lumbar spinal fusions. This work may further support the development of clinical studies to assess spinal fusion by evaluating postoperative intervertebral movement using RSA.