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The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 99-B, Issue 5 | Pages 585 - 591
1 May 2017
Buckland AJ Puvanesarajah V Vigdorchik J Schwarzkopf R Jain A Klineberg EO Hart RA Callaghan JJ Hassanzadeh H

Aims

Lumbar fusion is known to reduce the variation in pelvic tilt between standing and sitting. A flexible lumbo-pelvic unit increases the stability of total hip arthroplasty (THA) when seated by increasing anterior clearance and acetabular anteversion, thereby preventing impingement of the prosthesis. Lumbar fusion may eliminate this protective pelvic movement. The effect of lumbar fusion on the stability of total hip arthroplasty has not previously been investigated.

Patients and Methods

The Medicare database was searched for patients who had undergone THA and spinal fusion between 2005 and 2012. PearlDiver software was used to query the database by the International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) procedural code for primary THA and lumbar spinal fusion. Patients who had undergone both lumbar fusion and THA were then divided into three groups: 1 to 2 levels, 3 to 7 levels and 8+ levels of fusion. The rate of dislocation in each group was established using ICD-9-CM codes. Patients who underwent THA without spinal fusion were used as a control group. Statistical significant difference between groups was tested using the chi-squared test, and significance set at p < 0.05.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 87-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 292 - 292
1 Sep 2005
Kaspar S Riley L Cohen D Long D Kostuik J Hassanzadeh H
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Introduction and Aims: Although PD has characteristic findings and stages of progression, neither the nature of operative spine problems occurring in patients with PD, nor their peri-operative complications, have been presented previously.

Method: In this retrospective observational case series, we describe the nature of operative spine problems in patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD), and evaluate the incidence and types of peri-operative complications in spine surgery for patients with PD. A retrospective chart review was performed on 24 consecutive PD patients undergoing spine surgery in a six-year span at one institution. Nineteen were first surgeries, and five were first seen as failed back syndrome from surgery done elsewhere.

Results: The mean patient age was 69 years. Spinal stenosis (10 patients) and cervical myelopathy (4 patients) were the predominant pre-operative diagnoses for the primary surgeries, with three patients operated upon for kyphoscoliosis (16%) and two for other conditions. Minor or transient complications were common, including delirium, arrhythmia, deep vein thrombosis, and dural tear; there were also two significant PD-specific complications, including aspiration pneumonia and global motor paresis post-operatively. Four of 19 primary cases were revised for recurrent stenosis (two patients) or pseudarthrosis (two patients). The overall number of poor patient-reported outcomes was only two of 14 primary cases (five patients had inadequate outcome measures) and zero of seven revisions (two had inadequate outcome measures), at a mean follow-up of 19 months.

Conclusion: Symptoms and functional deficits of spinal disease were often masked by PD, posing diagnostic difficulty. However, outcomes and complications of spine surgery were similar to those of non-PD patients at the same institution. Spine symptoms improved concomitantly with successful surgery unless the PD progressed or significant complications ensued.