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Determinants of initial bone graft volume loss in posterolateral lumbar fusion
- Source :
- Journal of clinical neuroscience : official journal of the Neurosurgical Society of Australasia. 18(9)
- Publication Year :
- 2011
-
Abstract
- Bone graft volume decreases postoperatively without known etiology. We sought to determine the bone graft volume over time in 15 consecutive patients undergoing a single-level, instrumented, posterolateral lumbar fusion for degeneration causing mechanical pain or spondylolisthesis, and to identify factors associated with bone graft resorption. Following Institutional Review Board approval, a retrospective analysis was performed. Immediate and 3-month postoperative lumbar spine CT scans were imported into imaging software for volumetric analysis. We found that the 15 patients averaged approximately 11% graft volume loss at 3 months postoperatively. All patients exhibited volumetric graft loss on each side (range, 0.3-45%). A paired t-test revealed that immediate postoperative graft volume on a patient's left or right did not reflect graft volume on that side 3 months postoperatively (p=0.0008). Gender, age, history of prior operation, history of regular exercise, body mass index, level fused, operative time, initial graft volume, and laterality did not influence percentage volumetric loss (p=0.1-0.5). Interestingly, people who smoked cigarettes (range, 10-40 pack-years) exhibited 27% graft loss, compared to 7% in those who did not (Spearman p=0.009 graft loss versus pack-years smoked). We concluded that bone graft exhibited resorption 3 months postoperatively on both sides of all patients in this series, and that smoking was significantly associated with increased bone graft resorption.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Time Factors
medicine.medical_treatment
Lumbar vertebrae
Lumbar
Physiology (medical)
Medicine
Humans
Aged
Retrospective Studies
Bone Transplantation
Lumbar Vertebrae
business.industry
Smoking
Retrospective cohort study
General Medicine
Middle Aged
medicine.disease
Spondylolisthesis
Surgery
Resorption
Pseudarthrosis
medicine.anatomical_structure
Spinal Fusion
Treatment Outcome
Neurology
Spinal fusion
Female
Spinal Diseases
Neurology (clinical)
business
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
Body mass index
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15322653
- Volume :
- 18
- Issue :
- 9
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of clinical neuroscience : official journal of the Neurosurgical Society of Australasia
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9dc519bcc1ffb1ff2f4109e42a81d60d