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Lumbar Spinal Fixation with Cortical Bone Trajectory Pedicle Screws in 79 Patients with Degenerative Disease: Perioperative Outcomes and Complications
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Lumbar Spinal Fixation with Cortical Bone Trajectory Pedicle Screws in 79 Patients with Degenerative Disease: Perioperative Outcomes and Complications

Laura A Snyder, Eduardo Martinez-Del-Campo, Matthew T Neal, Hasan A Zaidi, Al-Wala Awad, Robert Bina, Francisco A Ponce, Taro Kaibara and Steve W Chang
World neurosurgery, Vol.88, pp.205-213
04/01/2016
PMID: 26746333

Abstract

Adult Aged Aged, 80 and over Arizona - epidemiology Causality Comorbidity Female Humans Intervertebral Disc Degeneration - epidemiology Intervertebral Disc Degeneration - surgery Length of Stay Lumbar Vertebrae - surgery Male Middle Aged Pedicle Screws - statistics & numerical data Perioperative Care - statistics & numerical data Postoperative Complications - epidemiology Postoperative Complications - prevention & control Prevalence Retrospective Studies Risk Factors Spinal Fusion - instrumentation Spinal Fusion - statistics & numerical data
Biomechanical studies demonstrate that cortical bone trajectory pedicle screws (CBTPS) have greater pullout strength than traditional pedicle screws with a lateral-medial trajectory. CBTPS start on the pars and angulate in a mediolateral-caudocranial direction. To our knowledge, no large series exists evaluating the perioperative outcomes and safety of CBTPS. We retrospectively reviewed all patients who received lumbar CBTPS at our institution. Data were collected regarding patient demographics, use of image guidance, operative blood loss, hospital stay, and postoperative complications. A total of 79 patients undergoing CBTPS fusion for degenerative lumbosacral disease with back pain were included in the analysis (42 female, 37 male; October 2011-January 2015). Twenty patients (25.3%) had previous lumbar spine surgery, 39 (49.4%) had a smoking history, and mean body mass index was 28.7. Mean length of stay was 3.5 days, and mean operative blood loss was 306.3 mL. Image guidance was used in 69 (87.3%) cases. A total of 66 (83.5%) fusions were single level, and 54 (68.4%) fusions were single level without previous surgery. There were 9 complications in 7 (8.9%) patients; these included hardware failure, pseudarthrosis, deep vein thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, epidural hematoma, and wound infection. No complications were caused by misplaced screws. Mean follow-up was 13.2 months. As CBTPS becomes increasingly popular among spine surgeons performing lumbar fusion, this report provides an important evaluation of technique safety and acceptable perioperative outcomes.

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