Preoperative Mental Health is not Predictive of Patient-reported Outcomes Following a Minimally Invasive Lumbar Discectomy

被引:8
|
作者
Mayo, Benjamin C. [1 ]
Massel, Dustin H. [1 ]
Bohl, Daniel D. [1 ]
Long, William W. [1 ]
Modi, Krishna D. [1 ]
Narain, Ankur S. [1 ]
Hijji, Fady Y. [1 ]
Lopez, Gregory [1 ]
Singh, Kern [1 ]
机构
[1] Rush Univ, Dept Orthopaed Surg, Med Ctr, 1611 W Harrison St,Suite 300, Chicago, IL 60612 USA
来源
CLINICAL SPINE SURGERY | 2017年 / 30卷 / 10期
关键词
mental health; depression; lumbar discectomy; outcomes; SF-12; ODI; VAS; DISC HERNIATION; SCORES; SF-12; LAMINECTOMY; SURGERY;
D O I
10.1097/BSD.0000000000000466
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Study Design:This is a retrospective cohort study.Objective:To determine if preoperative mental health is associated with patient-reported outcomes (PROs) following a minimally invasive lumbar discectomy.Summary of Background Data:PROs are commonly used to quantify a patient's perceived health status. Recently, mental health has been theorized to directly affect patients' perception of their disability and pain after spine surgery.Materials and Methods:A registry of patients who underwent a primary, single-level minimally invasive lumbar discectomy was reviewed. The association between preoperative Short-Form Health Survey mental composite score (MCS) and change in PROs [Oswestry Disability Index, back and leg visual analog scale (VAS) pain scores] from preoperative to postoperative (6-week, 12-week, 6-month) timepoints was assessed using multivariate regression controlling for patient demographics and the respective preoperative PRO. Patients in the top and bottom quartiles of preoperative MCS were compared regarding achievement of minimum clinically important difference for each PRO.Results:A total of 110 patients were included in the analysis. Better preoperative mental health was associated with lower preoperative disability and decreased preoperative back VAS (P<0.05 for each). Higher preoperative MCS was also associated with greater improvements in back VAS at 6-weeks postoperatively (P<0.05). There was no association between preoperative MCS and change in any PROs at the 12-week or 6-month postoperative visits. Patients in the bottom quartile of preoperative MCS achieved minimum clinically important difference in all PROs at similar rates to patients in the top quartile of preoperative MCS.Conclusions:Patients with better preoperative mental health scores are more likely to report decreased disability and pain preoperatively. However, preoperative mental health was not predictive of changes in long-term disability or pain. As a result, patients with a wide range of preoperative mental health scores can achieve satisfactory long-term reductions in disability and pain levels after a lumbar discectomy.Level of Evidence:Level IV.
引用
收藏
页码:E1388 / E1391
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Does Greater Body Mass Index Increase the Risk for Revision Procedures Following a Single-Level Minimally Invasive Lumbar Discectomy?
    Bohl, Daniel D.
    Ahn, Junyoung
    Mayo, Benjamin C.
    Massel, Dustin H.
    Tabaraee, Ehsan
    Sershon, Robert A.
    Basques, Bryce A.
    Singh, Kern
    SPINE, 2016, 41 (09) : 816 - 821
  • [42] Association of Preoperative Physical Function and Changes in Mental Health After Minimally Invasive Transforaminal Lumbar Interbody Fusion
    Jenkins, Nathaniel W.
    Parrish, James M.
    Lynch, Conor P.
    Cha, Elliot D. K.
    Jadczak, Caroline N.
    Mohan, Shruthi
    Geoghegan, Cara E.
    Singh, Kern
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SPINE SURGERY, 2021, 15 (06) : 1115 - 1122
  • [43] The Effect of Morbid Obesity on Complications, Readmission, and Patient-Reported Outcomes Following Minimally Invasive Transforaminal Lumbar Interbody Fusion An Inverse Propensity Score Weighted Analysis
    Claus, Chad F.
    Lawless, Michael
    Lytle, Evan
    Tong, Doris
    Bahoura, Matthew
    Garmo, Lucas
    Gabrail, Joseph
    Bono, Peter
    Kelkar, Prashant
    Richards, Boyd
    Carr, Daniel A.
    Houseman, Clifford
    Soo, Teck M.
    SPINE, 2021, 46 (20) : 1394 - 1401
  • [44] Association between muscle health and patient-reported outcomes after lumbar microdiscectomy: early results
    Song, Junho
    Araghi, Kasra
    Dupont, Marcel M.
    Shahi, Pratyush
    Bovonratwet, Patawut
    Shinn, Daniel
    Dalal, Sidhant S.
    Melissaridou, Dimitra
    Virk, Sohrab S.
    Iyer, Sravisht
    Dowdell, James E.
    Sheha, Evan D.
    Qureshi, Sheeraz A.
    SPINE JOURNAL, 2022, 22 (10) : 1677 - 1686
  • [45] Impact of preoperative back pain severity on PROMIS outcomes following minimally invasive lumbar decompression
    Anwar, Fatima N.
    Roca, Andrea M.
    Khosla, Ishan
    Loya, Alexandra C.
    Medakkar, Srinath S.
    Kaul, Aayush
    Wolf, Jacob C.
    Federico, Vincent P.
    Sayari, Arash J.
    Lopez, Gregory D.
    Singh, Kern
    EUROPEAN SPINE JOURNAL, 2024, 33 (11) : 4262 - 4269
  • [46] Minimally Invasive Tubular Lumbar Discectomy Versus Conventional Open Lumbar Discectomy: An Observational Study From the Canadian Spine Outcomes and Research Network
    Evaniew, Nathan
    Bogle, Andrew
    Soroceanu, Alex
    Jacobs, W. Bradley
    Cho, Roger
    Fisher, Charles G.
    Rampersaud, Y. Raja
    Weber, Michael H.
    Finkelstein, Joel A.
    Attabib, Najmedden
    Kelly, Adrienne
    Stratton, Alexandra
    Bailey, Christopher S.
    Paquet, Jerome
    Johnson, Michael
    Manson, Neil A.
    Hall, Hamilton
    McIntosh, Greg
    Thomas, Kenneth C.
    GLOBAL SPINE JOURNAL, 2023, 13 (05) : 1293 - 1304
  • [47] A simple minimally invasive technique of removing lumbar disc debris following discectomy
    Patel, N. K.
    Bajekal, R. A.
    ANNALS OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS OF ENGLAND, 2012, 94 (04) : 277 - 277
  • [48] Sex Differences on Postoperative Pain and Disability Following Minimally Invasive Lumbar Discectomy
    Patel, Dil, V
    Yoo, Joon S.
    Karmarkar, Sailee S.
    Lamoutte, Eric H.
    Singh, Kern
    CLINICAL SPINE SURGERY, 2019, 32 (10): : E444 - E448
  • [49] Response rate does not affect patient-reported outcome after lumbar discectomy
    P. Elkan
    T. Lagerbäck
    H. Möller
    Paul Gerdhem
    European Spine Journal, 2018, 27 : 1538 - 1546
  • [50] Poor patient-reported mental health correlates with inferior patient-reported outcome measures following cervical disc replacement
    Keith R. MacGregor
    Timothy J. Hartman
    James W. Nie
    Eileen Zheng
    Omolabake O. Oyetayo
    Dustin H. Massel
    Arash J. Sayari
    Kern Singh
    Acta Neurochirurgica, 2023, 165 : 3511 - 3519