Timing of Surgery for Thoracolumbar Spine Trauma Patients With Neurological Injury

被引:8
|
作者
Ruddell, Jack H. [1 ]
DePasse, J. Mason [2 ]
Tang, Oliver Y. [1 ]
Daniels, Alan H. [2 ]
机构
[1] Brown Univ, Warren Alpert Med Sch, Box G-A1, Providence, RI 02912 USA
[2] Brown Univ, Div Spine, Dept Orthopaed Surg, Warren Alpert Med Sch, Providence, RI 02912 USA
来源
CLINICAL SPINE SURGERY | 2021年 / 34卷 / 04期
关键词
thoracolumbar fracture; spinal fusion; spinal cord injury; timing; severity; complication; infection; trauma; FRACTURE FIXATION; MANAGEMENT; DECOMPRESSION; STABILIZATION; GUIDELINES; OUTCOMES; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1097/BSD.0000000000001078
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Study Design: Large multicenter retrospective cohort study. Objective: The objective of this study was to analyze the effect of fusion timing on inpatient outcomes in a nationally representative population with thoracolumbar fracture and concurrent neurological injury. Summary of Background Data: Among thoracolumbar trauma admissions, concurrent neurological injury is associated with greater long-term morbidity. There is little consensus on optimal surgical timing for these patients; previous investigations fail to differentiate thoracolumbar fracture with and without neurological injury. Materials and Methods: We analyzed 19,136 nonelective National Inpatient Sample cases (2004-2014) containing International Classifications of Disease, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) diagnosis codes for closed thoracic/lumbar fracture with neurological injury and procedure codes for primary thoracolumbar/lumbosacral fusion, excluding open/cervical fracture. Timing classification from admission to fusion was same-day, 1-2-, 3-6-, and >= 7-day delay. Primary outcomes included in-hospital mortality, complications, and infection; secondary outcomes included total and postoperative length of stay and charges. Logistic regressions and generalized linear models with gamma distribution and log-link evaluated the effect of surgical timing on primary and secondary outcomes, respectively, controlling for age, sex, fracture location, fusion approach, multiorgan system injury severity score, and medical comorbidities. Results: Patients undergoing surgery <= 72 hours (n=12,845) had the lowest odds of in-hospital cardiac [odds ratio (OR)=0.595; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.357-0.991] and respiratory complications (OR=0.495; 95% CI, 0.313-0.784) and infection (OR=0.615; 95% CI, 0.390-0.969). No differences were observed between same-day (n=4724) and 1-2-day delay (n=8121) (P>0.05). Lowest odds of hemorrhage or hematoma was observed following 3-6-day delay (OR=0.467; 95% CI, 0.236-0.922). A >= 7-day delay to fusion (n=2,002) was associated with greatest odds of hemorrhage/hematoma (OR=2.019; 1.107-3.683), respiratory complications (OR=1.850; 95% CI, 1.076-3.180), and infection (OR=3.155; 95% CI, 1.891-5.263) and greatest increases in mean postoperative length of stay (4.26% or 35.3% additional days) and charges (163,562 or 71.7% additional US dollars) (P<0.001). Conclusions: Patients with thoracolumbar fracture and associated neurological injury who underwent surgery within 3 days of admission experienced fewer in-hospital complications. These benefits may be due to secondary injury mechanism avoidance and earlier mobilization.
引用
收藏
页码:E229 / E236
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Timing of Surgery in Thoracolumbar Spine Injury: Impact on Neurological Outcome
    Qadir, Irfan
    Riew, K. Daniel
    Alam, Syed Roman
    Akram, Rizwan
    Waqas, Muhammad
    Aziz, Amer
    GLOBAL SPINE JOURNAL, 2020, 10 (07) : 826 - 831
  • [2] Timing of surgery for thoracolumbar spine trauma
    Eck, Jason C.
    Hodges, Scott D.
    CURRENT ORTHOPAEDIC PRACTICE, 2014, 25 (01): : 14 - 16
  • [3] Timing of surgery in thoracolumbar trauma: is early intervention safe?
    O'Boynick, Christopher Paul
    Kurd, Mark F.
    Darden, Bruce V., II
    Vaccaro, Alexander R.
    Fehlings, Michael G.
    NEUROSURGICAL FOCUS, 2014, 37 (01)
  • [4] Congress of Neurological Surgeons Systematic Review and Evidence-Based Guidelines on the Evaluation and Treatment of Patients With Thoracolumbar Spine Trauma: Timing of Surgical Intervention
    Eichholz, Kurt M.
    Rabb, Craig H.
    Anderson, Paul A.
    Arnold, Paul M.
    Chi, John H.
    Dailey, Andrew T.
    Dhall, Sanjay S.
    Harrop, James S.
    Hoh, Daniel J.
    Qureshi, Sheeraz
    Raksin, P. B.
    Kaiser, Michael G.
    O'Toole, John E.
    NEUROSURGERY, 2019, 84 (01) : E53 - E55
  • [5] Timing of Operative Intervention in Traumatic Spine Injuries Without Neurological Deficit
    Kim, Elliott J.
    Wick, Joseph B.
    Stonko, David P.
    Chotai, Silky
    Freeman, Thomas H., Jr.
    Douleh, Diana G.
    Mistry, Akshitkumar M.
    Parker, Scott L.
    Devin, Clinton J.
    NEUROSURGERY, 2018, 83 (05) : 1015 - 1022
  • [6] Does Surgical Intervention or Timing of Surgery Have an Effect on Neurological Recovery in the Setting of a Thoracolumbar Burst Fracture?
    Kato, So
    Murray, Jean-Christophe
    Kwon, Brian K.
    Schroeder, Gregory D.
    Vaccaro, Alexander R.
    Fehlings, Michael G.
    JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC TRAUMA, 2017, 31 : S38 - S43
  • [7] Elective Thoracolumbar Spine Fusion Surgery in Patients with Parkinson Disease
    Puvanesarajah, Varun
    Jain, Amit
    Qureshi, Rabia
    Carstensen, S. Evan
    Tyger, Rosemarie
    Hassanzadeh, Hamid
    WORLD NEUROSURGERY, 2016, 96 : 267 - 271
  • [8] Thoracolumbar spinal cord injury: management, techniques, timing
    Jug, Marko
    Komadina, Radko
    Wendt, Klaus
    Pape, Hans Christoph
    Bloemers, Frank
    Nau, Christoph
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF TRAUMA AND EMERGENCY SURGERY, 2024, 50 (05) : 1969 - 1975
  • [9] Timing of Surgery in Spinal Cord Injury
    El Tecle, Najib E.
    Dahdaleh, Nader S.
    Hitchon, Patrick W.
    SPINE, 2016, 41 (16) : E995 - E1004
  • [10] Endoscopic surgery on the thoracolumbar junction of the spine
    Beisse, Rudolf
    EUROPEAN SPINE JOURNAL, 2010, 19 : 52 - 65