J Korean Neurosurg Soc.  2005 Apr;37(4):258-262.

The Triple Entrapment Syndrome of the 5th Lumbar Spinal Nerve

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Neurosurgery, Gimpo Airport Wooridul Spine Hospital, Seoul, Korea. spinejjs@yahoo.co.kr

Abstract


OBJECTIVE
The 5th lumbar spinal nerve can be entrapped in the intraspinal zone, foraminal zone, and the extraforaminal zone simultaneously. The failure to recognize that the nerve root can be compressed in such manners may be the reason of a number of failures of surgical decompression. Here we describe a microsurgical method for the decompression of the triple entrapment of the L5 spinal nerve in 21 patients. METHODS: Clinical manifestations and surgical results of twenty-one patients treated surgically under the diagnosis of the triple entrapment of the L5 spinal nerve were reviewed retrospectively. All patients were treated by the posterior midline approach for the intraspinal entrapment and by the paraspinal approach for the foraminal and the extraforaminal entrapment. RESULTS: Pain relief was obtained in all patients immediately after surgery. The mean follow-up period after the surgery was 13 months, ranged from 6 to 24 months. The mean Numeric Rating Scale (pain score) improved from 8.9 before the surgery to 1.4 (p < 0.0001). The mean ODI scores improved from 76.2 before the surgery to 13.1 (p < 0.0001). Nineteen patients were satisfied with their result at the last follow-up examination. Neither complications related to the surgery, nor the spinal instability was detected. CONCLUSION: The triple entrapment of the 5th lumbar spinal nerve is an important pathologic entity to identify for the treatment of L5 radiculopathy. Combined medial and lateral approaches are safe, minimally invasive and it provide the complete decompression of triple entrapment of the L5 spinal nerve without causing secondary instability like after complete facetectomy.

Keyword

Triple entrapment syndrome; L5 spinal nerve; Surgical decompression

MeSH Terms

Decompression
Decompression, Surgical
Diagnosis
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Radiculopathy
Retrospective Studies
Spinal Nerves*
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