Abstract
The purpose of this review is to evaluatei the clinical and surgical aspects of lumbar disc herniation in paediatric and adolescent patients. Between 1975 and 1991, a total of 5,160 lumbar disc operations were performed at the Rizzoli Orthopaedic Institutes. We included in this study only 129 patients (2.5%), aged from 9 to 18 years, with a mean age of 16.2 years (S.D. 1.7). Almost half of the patients (66 cases) ranged from 17 to 18 years of age and 49% (63 cases) from 9 to 16. Only three subjects were aged 9, 11 and 12 years.
This group consisted of 84 boys and 45 girls. Eleven had noted the onset of symptoms after a trauma and 15 during athletic activities or after lifting heavy objects. Almost all of the patients (106 cases, 82%) had low-back pain with radiculopathy, 13% (17 cases) complained of lumbar pain alone, 5% (six cases) had sciatica and 16% (21 cases) presented with a radicular neurological deficit.
Posterior discectomy by conventional procedure without fusion was performed in all patients, except for three cases with associated spondylolisthesis, treated by a posterolateral artrodesis, supplemented in two cases by pedicle screw fusion. Patients were followed in a short-term assessment using medical records. Long-term follow-up was conducted by a mailed, self-report questionnaire that quantified leg and back pain and scored the ability to return to normal activities and satisfaction.
Short-term results were excellent for 120 patients (93%) and postoperative complications included one superficial wound infection and one discitis. A total of 98 (76%) long-term responses were obtained with a mean follow-up time of 12.4 years (range, 6-19.4 years). Mean age at long-term follow-up was 28.7 years whereas the functional outcomes were excellent in 56%, good 30% and poor 14%. Eight patients (6.2%) required additional surgical treatment at a mean interval from the first surgery of 9 years (range 2 to 16). Three of them had a re-exploration for a herniated disc at the same level, five at a different level.
Our results have confirmed, as in adult patients, a negative trend between the short-term and long-term functional outcomes in young patients treated by discectomy. Furthermore, they have suggested that young individuals with lumbar Scheuermann-type changes are at great risk of experiencing herniation of intervertebral discs (10% in our series).