Microendoscopic decompression for lumbosacral foraminal stenosis: a novel surgical strategy based on anatomical considerations using 3D image fusion with MRI/CT

Author:

Murata Shizumasa1,Minamide Akihito1,Iwasaki Hiroshi1,Nakagawa Yukihiro2,Hashizume Hiroshi1,Yukawa Yasutsugu1,Tsutsui Shunji1,Takami Masanari1,Okada Motohiro1,Nagata Keiji1,Yoshida Munehito3,Schoenfeld Andrew J.4,Simpson Andrew K.4,Yamada Hiroshi1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Wakayama Medical University, Wakayama;

2. Spine Care Center, Wakayama Medical University Kihoku Hospital, Wakayama;

3. Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Sumiya Orthopaedic Hospital, Wakayama, Japan; and

4. Microendoscopic Spine Institute and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

Abstract

OBJECTIVEPersistent lumbar foraminal stenosis (LFS) is one of the most common reasons for poor postoperative outcomes and is a major contributor to “failed back surgery syndrome.” The authors describe a new surgical strategy for LFS based on anatomical considerations using 3D image fusion with MRI/CT analysis.METHODSA retrospective review was conducted on 78 consecutive patients surgically treated for LFS at the lumbosacral junction (2013–2017). The location and extent of stenosis, including the narrowest site and associated pathology (bone or soft tissue), were measured using 3D image fusion with MRI/CT. Stenosis was defined as medial intervertebral foraminal (MF; inner edge to pedicle center), lateral intervertebral foraminal (LF; pedicle center to outer edge), or extraforaminal (EF; outside the pedicle). Lumbar (low-back pain, leg pain) and patient satisfaction visual analog scale (VAS) scores and Japanese Orthopaedic Association (JOA) scores were evaluated. Surgical outcome was evaluated 2 years postoperatively.RESULTSMost instances of stenosis existed outside the pedicle’s center (94%), including LF (58%), EF (36%), and MF (6%). In all MF cases, stenosis resulted from soft-tissue structures. The narrowest stenosis sites were localized around the pedicle’s outer border. The areas for sufficient nerve decompression were extended in MF+LF (10%), MF+LF+EF (14%), LF+EF (39%), LF (11%), and EF (26%). No iatrogenic pars interarticularis damage occurred. The JOA score was 14.9 ± 2.6 points preoperatively and 22.4 ± 3.5 points at 2 years postoperatively. The JOA recovery rate was 56.0% ± 18.6%. The VAS score (low-back and leg pain) was significantly improved 2 years postoperatively (p < 0.01). According to patients’ self-assessment of the minimally invasive surgery, 62 (79.5%) chose “surgery met my expectations” at follow-up. Nine patients (11.5%) selected “I did not improve as much as I had hoped but I would undergo the same surgery for the same outcome.”CONCLUSIONSMost LFS existed outside the pedicle’s center and was rarely noted in the pars region. The main regions of stenosis were localized to the pedicle’s outer edge. Considering this anatomical distribution of LFS, the authors recommend that lateral fenestration should be the first priority for foraminal decompression. Other surgical options including foraminotomy, total facetectomy, and hemilaminectomy likely require more bone resections than LFS treatment. The microendoscopic surgery results were very good, indicating that this minimally invasive surgery was suitable for treating this disease.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

General Medicine

Reference44 articles.

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4. Surgical treatment for lumbar disc herniation: osteoplastic partial laminectomy. Article in Japanese;Kirita;Saigai Igaku,1975

5. Microsurgical nerve root canal widening without fusion for lumbosacral intervertebral foraminal stenosis: technical notes and early results;Baba;Spinal Cord,1996

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