AI Article Synopsis

  • - The paper discusses lumbar spine stenosis, a condition increasingly common due to an aging population, and addresses uncertainties about its natural progression and treatment options through a consensus by the World Federation of Neurosurgical Society Spine Committee.
  • - A two-round conference led by expert spine surgeons reviewed a decade’s worth of literature on surgical treatments, resulting in ten statements about the effectiveness of surgical decompression and complications associated with it.
  • - While surgical decompression is recommended for patients with moderate-to-severe symptoms, there's still no consensus on the best surgical technique, highlighting the need for further research to clarify complications and outcomes.

Article Abstract

Objective: Lumbar spine stenosis is a common disease with a prevalence progressively increasing due to the aging of the population. Despite many papers having been published over the last decades, there still remain many doubts regarding its natural history and appropriate treatment. To overcome these problems and reach some globally accepted recommendations, the World Federation of Neurosurgical Society Spine Committee organized a consensus conference on this topic. This paper describes recommendations about the efficacy of surgical decompression, the difference between surgical techniques, and complications of surgery.

Methods: World Federation of Neurosurgical Society Spine Committee aimed to standardize clinical practice worldwide as much as possible and held a 2-round consensus conference on lumbar spinal stenosis. A team of expert spine surgeons reviewed literature regarding surgical treatment from over the last 10 years, and then drafted and voted on some statements based on the presented literature.

Results: Ten statements were voted. The committee agreed on the effectiveness of surgical decompression in patients with moderate-to-severe symptoms or with neurologic deficits. There was no consensus on the best surgical technique and, in particular, about the equivalence of microscopic techniques and an open approach. Regarding complications, we agreed that the most frequent complications are incidental durotomy and general complications in the elderly.

Conclusions: Surgical decompression represents the treatment of choice for symptomatic lumbar spinal stenosis with a low complication rate. However, which surgical technique is the best is still under debate. Further studies with standardized outcome measures are needed to understand the real complication rate and frequency of different unwanted events.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7322794PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wnsx.2020.100076DOI Listing

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