Publications by authors named "Kojo Hamilton"

Adult spinal deformity comprises a heterogeneous group of disorders that primarily affects older patients and can have a significant negative affect on health-related quality of life. Operative treatment for adult spinal deformity typically entails posterior instrumented fusions that have demonstrated the potential to significantly improve health-related quality of life outcomes. However, until fusion is achieved, the instrumentation providing structural support is subject to repetitive cyclical loading that disproportionately fatigues high-stress areas and can result in instrumentation failure.

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Objective: Malalignment following cervical spine deformity (CSD) surgery can negatively impact outcomes and increase complications. Despite the growing ability to plan alignment, it remains unclear whether preoperative goals are achieved with surgery. The objective of this study was to assess how good surgeons are at achieving their preoperative goal alignment following CSD surgery.

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Study Design: Retrospective analysis of prospectively-collected data.

Objective: This study aims to define clinically relevant blood loss in adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery.

Background: Current definitions of excessive blood loss following spine surgery are highly variable and may be suboptimal in predicting adverse events (AE).

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how different reasons for revision surgery in adult spinal deformity (ASD) patients affect their postoperative outcomes, revealing a high incidence of reoperations.
  • A sample of 891 ASD patients was analyzed retrospectively, categorizing their revisions by cause, and assessing complications, radiographic results, and disability metrics.
  • Findings suggest that different etiologies (mechanical, infection, wound, and SI pain) lead to varying outcomes, with mechanical issues showing less improvement over time compared to others.
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Introduction: Acute traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) results in a lifelong condition without any standardized biomarker or corresponding interventions. The objective of this study was to correlate changes in fluid biomarkers with the severity of SCI.

Methods: The test model used forces of 100 and 200 kdyn.

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Background And Objectives: The spectrum of patients requiring adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery is highly variable in baseline (BL) risk such as age, frailty, and deformity severity. Although improvements have been realized in ASD surgery over the past decade, it is unknown whether these carry over to high-risk patients. We aim to determine temporal differences in outcomes at 2 years after ASD surgery in patients stratified by BL risk.

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Article Synopsis
  • - AtlasGPT is a generative model designed for neurosurgery that adjusts its responses based on the user's level of expertise, but it's unclear if all users can understand its outputs properly.
  • - A study evaluated the readability of AtlasGPT's responses from four user perspectives (surgeon, resident, medical student, and patient) using readability analysis tools and statistical tests.
  • - Results showed that patient-targeted content was harder to read than preferred levels, while medical student responses were slightly easier, highlighting a need for improvement to meet readability standards set by U.S. authorities.
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Objective: The objective of this study was to identify baseline patient and surgical factors predictive of optimal outcomes in staged versus same-day combined-approach surgery.

Methods: Adult spinal deformity (ASD) patients with baseline and perioperative (by 6 weeks) data were stratified based on single-stage (same-day) or multistage (staged) surgery, excluding planned multiple hospitalizations. Means comparison analyses were used to assess baseline demographic, radiographic, and surgical differences between cohorts.

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Objective: The goal of this study was to assess the impact of fractional curve (FC) severity on curve progression and postoperative outcomes in patients undergoing adult idiopathic scoliosis (AdIS) correction.

Methods: Patients with AdIS who had preoperative coronal plane deformity and who had undergone thoracolumbar fusion with a lowermost instrumented vertebra (LIV) between L1 and L4 were included. Patients were stratified by 6-week postoperative FC severity (small FC, ≤ 40th percentile, large FC, ≥ 60th percentile of the entire cohort; calculated as the Cobb angle between LIV and S1) and age groups.

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Study Design: Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data.

Objective: This study evaluates the impact of knee osteoarthritis (OA) and knee arthroplasty on alignments and patient-reported outcomes measures (PROMS) of patients undergoing adult spinal deformity (ASD) corrective surgery.

Background: The relationship between knee OA and spinal alignment in patients with ASD is incompletely understood.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigated spinal and paraspinal injuries related to golf, analyzing emergency department data from 2003 to 2023 to understand the associated risks and outcomes.
  • - A total of 69,153 emergency visits were estimated for golf-related spine injuries, with the majority of injured individuals being males aged around 52.8 years, and lumbar injuries making up 76.9% of cases.
  • - Strains were the most common diagnosis, and while the overall injury frequency remained stable, the average age of those injured has increased significantly over the years.
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  • Understanding preoperative deformity in lumbar spine revisions can help improve outcomes and prevent failures in future surgeries.
  • A study compared patients with no prior surgery (PRIMARY) and those with short (SHORT) or long (LONG) fusions, highlighting how different failure modes correlate with shorter fusions.
  • Results showed that revision patients experienced significant alignment issues and often required more invasive correction techniques, indicating a need for better alignment strategies in future operations.
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  • Tranexamic acid (TXA) is used in adult spinal deformity surgery to reduce blood loss, but there's no agreed-upon dosing method.
  • A study analyzed data from 265 complex ASD patients, categorizing them into low, medium, and high TXA dose groups and measuring blood loss, complications, and RBC transfusions.
  • Findings revealed that lower TXA doses resulted in significantly higher blood loss and increased RBC transfusions compared to high doses, suggesting that higher TXA dosing may be more effective in minimizing blood loss during surgery.
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Study Design: Case-based survey.

Objectives: This study aims to investigate what a group of surgeons learned from their own revisions, and what they would do differently today.

Methods: A multi-center database of ASD surgical patients was queried to identify those with at least 2 surgical procedures performed by the same surgeon between 2009 and 2019.

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Background: Our understanding of the relationship between sagittal alignment and mechanical complications is evolving. In normal spines, the L1-pelvic angle (L1PA) accounts for the magnitude and distribution of lordosis and is strongly associated with pelvic incidence (PI), and the T4-pelvic angle (T4PA) is within 4° of the L1PA. We aimed to examine the clinical implications of realignment to a normal L1PA and T4-L1PA mismatch.

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Objective: Correction of mild flexible cervical deformity (CD) via the posterior approach has been described with and without the use of posterior osteotomies (POs), despite a lack of clarity regarding their necessity or risks. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the use of POs when correcting mild flexible CD leads to improved clinical or radiographic outcomes, as well as defining the relative risks in utilizing them.

Methods: A prospective multicenter registry of operative CD patients was analyzed.

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Purpose: To evaluate the variability in intraoperative fluid management during adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery, and analyze the association with complications, intensive care unit (ICU) requirement, and length of hospital stay (LOS).

Methods: Multicenter comparative cohort study. Patients ≥ 18 years old and with ASD were included.

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Study Design: Retrospective Cohort Study.

Objectives: Length of Stay (LOS) and resource utilization are of primary importance for hospital administration. This study aimed to understand the incremental effect of having a specific complication on LOS among ASD patients.

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Background: Proper documentation is essential for patient care. The popularity of artificial intelligence (AI) offers the potential for improvements in neurosurgical note-writing. This study aimed to assess how AI can optimize documentation in neurosurgical procedures.

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Study Design: Retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data.

Objective: Evaluate the impact of prior cervical constructs on upper instrumented vertebrae (UIV) selection and postoperative outcomes among patients undergoing thoracolumbar deformity correction.

Background: Surgical planning for adult spinal deformity (ASD) patients involves consideration of spinal alignment and existing fusion constructs.

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Purpose: Adult spinal deformity (ASD) patients with sagittal plane deformity (N) or structural lumbar/thoraco-lumbar (TL) curves can be treated with fusions stopping at the TL junction or extending to the upper thoracic (UT) spine. This study evaluates the impact on cost/cumulative quality-adjusted life year (QALY) in patients treated with TL vs UT fusion.

Methods: ASD patients with > 4-level fusion and 2-year follow-up were included.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the "July Effect," which suggests that the influx of inexperienced physicians in July could lead to worse patient outcomes, focusing on traumatic brain injury (TBI) cases in teaching hospitals.
  • Using nationwide data, researchers compared patient outcomes based on admission month and found July admissions had a decreased likelihood of death and complications.
  • The results showed no significant effect of July admissions on length of stay or routine discharge rates for TBI patients undergoing surgery.
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