J Korean Soc Spine Surg.  1997 Nov;4(2):309-318.

The Results of Treatment of Multilevel Spinal Stenosis: Comparison of the results on the numbers of decompressed segments and types of bone graft

Abstract

STUDY DESIGN: Ninty eight patients with multilevel spinal stenosis who were treated with posterior decompression and instrumented posterolateral fusion were reviewed retrospectively. All patients were divided two groups by pathologic level and surgery level. One is complete level decompression group (whole pathologic levels were decompressed) and the other is limited level decompression group (less than pathologic levels were decompressed). SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Many patients with spinal stenosis haute multilevel pathology, which is very difficult problem to make surgical strategy for determination of decompression level. METHOD: Patients were reviewed using combination of clinical records, follow-up examinations and radiographs. Posterior decompression and instrumented posterolateral fusion were performed in all patients using pedicle screw fixation (TSRH 49 cases, Diapason 37 cases, CCD 12 cases) and either autogenous bone graft alone or autograft with allograft. The average follow-up period was 19.7 months.
RESULTS
In the clinical results by the criteria of Kirkalldy-Willis, there was no difference between complete level decompression group and limited level decompression group. By the bone graft mothorts, fusion rate was no difference between autograft alone group and autograft with allograft group, but fusion periods were more shorter in autograft alone group than in autograft with allograft group(P>0.05).
CONCLUSION
In multilevel spinal stenosis, the segments that associated with neurologic symptoms or seyeie stenosis on radiograph must be decompressed but the segments that not associated with neurologic symptoms and mild stenosis on radiograph do not need preventive decompression.


MeSH Terms

Allografts
Autografts
Constriction, Pathologic
Decompression
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Neurologic Manifestations
Pathology
Retrospective Studies
Spinal Stenosis*
Transplants*
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