Background: Risk factors for incidental durotomies are good documented by some authors who consider the degree of invasiveness as a direct risk factor on this serious complication. We compared the rate of incidental durotomies and its dependence from the degree of invasiveness.
Methods: The German Spine Registry could document 6016 surgeries for lumbar spinal canal stenosis, N.=2539 microsurgical decompression, and N.=2371 open decompression with stabilization.
Results: Both groups were identical concerning age and sex of patients, mean age: 77.1±1.60; females: 58%; males: 32%. There were 410 incidental durotomies, group 1: 209 (8.23%); group 2: 201 (8.47%). This difference is statistically not relevant (P=0,75). A surgical therapy is documented in 345 (84%) cases, suture with/without fibrin glue: group 1=162 and group 2=183. Fifty-nine patients had a persistent fistula that needed treatment with a lumbar drain, group 1: N.=30; and group 2: N.=29.
Conclusions: The groups decompression vs. decompression plus fusion are statistically comparable. Although the stabilization with instrumentation is a more invasive procedure with longer operation times, trauma tissue and blood loss - in comparison with microsurgical decompression - showed no difference in the rate of incidental durotomies.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.23736/S0390-5616.18.04381-3 | DOI Listing |
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