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Anterior Spinal Fusion Using Autologous Bone Grafting via the Lateral Approach with Posterior Short-Range Instrumentation for Lumbar Pyogenic Spondylitis with Vertebral Bone Destruction Enables Early Ambulation and Prevents Spinal Deformity

INTRODUCTION: Pyogenic spondylitis of the lumbar spine markedly decreases the ability to perform activities of daily living and causes severe low back pain. The challenge is to improve low back pain and activities of daily living performance earlier and prevent post-infection sequelae, and conservat...

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Autores principales: Nojiri, Hidetoshi, Okuda, Takatoshi, Miyagawa, Kei, Kobayashi, Nozomu, Sato, Tatsuya, Hara, Takeshi, Ohara, Yukoh, Kaneko, Kazuo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Japanese Society for Spine Surgery and Related Research 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7661023/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33195856
http://dx.doi.org/10.22603/ssrr.2020-0049
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author Nojiri, Hidetoshi
Okuda, Takatoshi
Miyagawa, Kei
Kobayashi, Nozomu
Sato, Tatsuya
Hara, Takeshi
Ohara, Yukoh
Kaneko, Kazuo
author_facet Nojiri, Hidetoshi
Okuda, Takatoshi
Miyagawa, Kei
Kobayashi, Nozomu
Sato, Tatsuya
Hara, Takeshi
Ohara, Yukoh
Kaneko, Kazuo
author_sort Nojiri, Hidetoshi
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Pyogenic spondylitis of the lumbar spine markedly decreases the ability to perform activities of daily living and causes severe low back pain. The challenge is to improve low back pain and activities of daily living performance earlier and prevent post-infection sequelae, and conservative treatment with antibiotics is the mainstay of treatment. METHODS: In the present study, patients who were unable to walk following lumbar pyogenic spondylitis even in the subacute phase after successful infection control, showing bone defects expanding from endplate to vertebral body in CT, were treated with posterior percutaneous short-range instrumentation and anterior autogenous bone grafting (group S, n = 10) or with conservative treatment alone (group C, n = 10). Acute cases of absolute surgical indication with paralytic symptoms and mild cases who could walk by antibiotics administration were excluded. The two groups were compared regarding the post-treatment change in C-reactive protein level, duration of bed rest, and post-infection local spinal deformities (local scoliosis angle in the coronal plane and local kyphosis angle in the sagittal plane). RESULTS: Compared with group C, group S took a significantly shorter time for the C-reactive protein level to return to normal and required a significantly shorter duration of bed rest. Furthermore, surgery prevented the formation of kyphosis and scoliosis, while group C developed local kyphosis. CONCLUSIONS: The minimally invasive surgical method of posterior percutaneous short-range instrumentation and anterior autogenous bone grafting effectively enables early control of pain and maintenance of locomotive function and prevents spinal deformity in patients with lumbar pyogenic spondylitis in the subacute phase with advanced vertebral bone destruction.
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spelling pubmed-76610232020-11-13 Anterior Spinal Fusion Using Autologous Bone Grafting via the Lateral Approach with Posterior Short-Range Instrumentation for Lumbar Pyogenic Spondylitis with Vertebral Bone Destruction Enables Early Ambulation and Prevents Spinal Deformity Nojiri, Hidetoshi Okuda, Takatoshi Miyagawa, Kei Kobayashi, Nozomu Sato, Tatsuya Hara, Takeshi Ohara, Yukoh Kaneko, Kazuo Spine Surg Relat Res Original Article INTRODUCTION: Pyogenic spondylitis of the lumbar spine markedly decreases the ability to perform activities of daily living and causes severe low back pain. The challenge is to improve low back pain and activities of daily living performance earlier and prevent post-infection sequelae, and conservative treatment with antibiotics is the mainstay of treatment. METHODS: In the present study, patients who were unable to walk following lumbar pyogenic spondylitis even in the subacute phase after successful infection control, showing bone defects expanding from endplate to vertebral body in CT, were treated with posterior percutaneous short-range instrumentation and anterior autogenous bone grafting (group S, n = 10) or with conservative treatment alone (group C, n = 10). Acute cases of absolute surgical indication with paralytic symptoms and mild cases who could walk by antibiotics administration were excluded. The two groups were compared regarding the post-treatment change in C-reactive protein level, duration of bed rest, and post-infection local spinal deformities (local scoliosis angle in the coronal plane and local kyphosis angle in the sagittal plane). RESULTS: Compared with group C, group S took a significantly shorter time for the C-reactive protein level to return to normal and required a significantly shorter duration of bed rest. Furthermore, surgery prevented the formation of kyphosis and scoliosis, while group C developed local kyphosis. CONCLUSIONS: The minimally invasive surgical method of posterior percutaneous short-range instrumentation and anterior autogenous bone grafting effectively enables early control of pain and maintenance of locomotive function and prevents spinal deformity in patients with lumbar pyogenic spondylitis in the subacute phase with advanced vertebral bone destruction. The Japanese Society for Spine Surgery and Related Research 2020-06-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7661023/ /pubmed/33195856 http://dx.doi.org/10.22603/ssrr.2020-0049 Text en Copyright © 2020 by The Japanese Society for Spine Surgery and Related Research https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Spine Surgery and Related Research is an Open Access journal distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. To view the details of this license, please visit (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Article
Nojiri, Hidetoshi
Okuda, Takatoshi
Miyagawa, Kei
Kobayashi, Nozomu
Sato, Tatsuya
Hara, Takeshi
Ohara, Yukoh
Kaneko, Kazuo
Anterior Spinal Fusion Using Autologous Bone Grafting via the Lateral Approach with Posterior Short-Range Instrumentation for Lumbar Pyogenic Spondylitis with Vertebral Bone Destruction Enables Early Ambulation and Prevents Spinal Deformity
title Anterior Spinal Fusion Using Autologous Bone Grafting via the Lateral Approach with Posterior Short-Range Instrumentation for Lumbar Pyogenic Spondylitis with Vertebral Bone Destruction Enables Early Ambulation and Prevents Spinal Deformity
title_full Anterior Spinal Fusion Using Autologous Bone Grafting via the Lateral Approach with Posterior Short-Range Instrumentation for Lumbar Pyogenic Spondylitis with Vertebral Bone Destruction Enables Early Ambulation and Prevents Spinal Deformity
title_fullStr Anterior Spinal Fusion Using Autologous Bone Grafting via the Lateral Approach with Posterior Short-Range Instrumentation for Lumbar Pyogenic Spondylitis with Vertebral Bone Destruction Enables Early Ambulation and Prevents Spinal Deformity
title_full_unstemmed Anterior Spinal Fusion Using Autologous Bone Grafting via the Lateral Approach with Posterior Short-Range Instrumentation for Lumbar Pyogenic Spondylitis with Vertebral Bone Destruction Enables Early Ambulation and Prevents Spinal Deformity
title_short Anterior Spinal Fusion Using Autologous Bone Grafting via the Lateral Approach with Posterior Short-Range Instrumentation for Lumbar Pyogenic Spondylitis with Vertebral Bone Destruction Enables Early Ambulation and Prevents Spinal Deformity
title_sort anterior spinal fusion using autologous bone grafting via the lateral approach with posterior short-range instrumentation for lumbar pyogenic spondylitis with vertebral bone destruction enables early ambulation and prevents spinal deformity
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7661023/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33195856
http://dx.doi.org/10.22603/ssrr.2020-0049
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