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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 92-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 568 - 568
1 Oct 2010
Tuschel A Meissl M Ogon M Schenk S
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Introduction: Obesity is often considered as a risk-factor for higher complication rates and worse clinical outcome of fusion surgery in the lumbar spine and is therefore sometimes not performed in obese patients despite relative indication for surgery. The goal of this study was to evaluate whether BMI is a predictive factor for clinical outcome after monosegmental fusion surgery in the lumbar spine.

Patients and Methods: The present study is a retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data in a consecutive series of patients.

Between April 2002 and April 2007, a total of 467 patients underwent monosegmental lumbar fusion in a single spine-center. Preoperatively and at 6 weeks and 1 year follow-up, SF36 and Oswestry-Disability-Index scores were collected. We excluded patients who underwent surgery due to infections, tumor and trauma, as well as revision surgeries, and all patients with incomplete datasets, so that 223 patients were included in the study. Of those patients, variables considered as risk-factors like age, BMI and the presence of diabetes mellitus were assessed from the medical records. A multiple regression model for those parameters and clinical outcome was cretated. Results: In an unadjusted model, BMI did not at all predict clinical outcome, in a multivariate model adjusted for baseline outcome values of SF36, Oswestry-Disability index and age, a slight trend towards negative correlation between BMI and outcome could be shown (p=0.06).

Conclusion: This study suggests that BMI alone is not a good predictor of clinical outcome of monosegmental lumbar fusion and that therefore this kind of surgery should not be withheld from patients only because of obesity.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 91-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 471 - 471
1 Sep 2009
Meizer R Schenk S Kramer R Aigner N Meizer E Landsiedl F Steinböck G
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For surgical treatment of hallux rigidus many different procedures have been described. Resection arthroplasty (‘Keller procedure’) is a surgical procedure mostly used for older patients suffering from severe osteoarthritis of the first metatarsophalangeal joint. As a modification of this procedure, resection arthroplasty is combined with cheilectomy and interposition of the dorsal capsule and extensor hallucis brevis tendon, which are then sutured to the flexor hallucis brevis tendon on the plantar side of the joint (capsular interposition arthroplasty, IA).

Capsular interposition arthroplasty was performed on 22 feet of 14 patients (six male, eight female) suffering from osteoarthritis of the 1st MTP-joint were included in this study (group 1). These results were compared to the outcome of 30 feet of 22 patients (12 male, 10 female) treated with resection arthroplasty (group 2). The indication for resection arthroplasty were the same as for IA. The mean age was 55.3 years (37.6 to 71.2) in group 1 and 57.8 (43.5 to 75.6) in group 2. The age distribution of our patients at surgery did not differ significantly between both groups (p=0.633). The mean follow-up period was 15.1 month, range 6 to 27 months and did not differ between both groups (group 1: 16.5 month, group 2: 14.1 month; p=0.143).

The mean follow-up period was 15 months. No statistically significant difference was found between both groups concerning patient’s satisfaction, clinical outcome and increase in range of motion of the first metatarsophalangeal joint. At follow-up, patients who had undergone interposition arthroplasty did not show statistically significant better AOFAS forefoot-scores compared to the Keller procedure group. A high rate of osteonecrosis of the first metatarsal head was found in both groups. These radiological findings did not correlate with the clinical outcome at follow-up.

There is no benefit in clinical or radiological outcome for capsular interposition arthroplasty compared to the Keller procedure.