Interspinous distraction in lumbar spinal stenosis: a neurophysiological perspective.

Constantin Schizas, Etienne Pralong, Christopher Tzioupis, Gerit Kulik
Author Information
  1. Constantin Schizas: From the Departments of *Orthopedics and †Neurosurgery, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois (CHUV), and the University of Lausanne, Lausanne Switzerland; and ‡Hirslanden Group of Hospitals, Lausanne, Switzerland.

Abstract

STUDY DESIGN: Prospective neurophysiological study.
OBJECTIVE: To identify and quantify the neurophysiological effects of interspinous distraction during spine surgery for lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS).
SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Interspinous devices have been introduced as an alternative treatment of LSS in selected patients aiming at obtaining indirect decompression. Nevertheless, there is no data on the immediate neurophysiological effect of distraction.
METHODS: Thirty patients with LSS undergoing decompression (14 at single level, 16 at multiple levels) were enrolled, resulting in a total of 48 levels to be analyzed. Before decompression, calibrated incremental distraction simulating interspinous device implantation of 8, 10, 12, 14, and 16 mm was performed. Intraoperative motor evoked potentials were acquired before any distraction, during distraction at each incremental value and after bilateral decompression. We evaluated relative changes of motor evoked potentials normalized to hand muscles and related them to the number of affected levels, LSS radiological severity based on the A to D grading, lordosis, and disc height.
RESULTS: For single-level disease, 8-mm distraction and open decompression yielded similar improvement in motor evoked potentials not only in levels with morphological grades A or B, but also in levels with morphological grades C or D (i.e., severe or extreme stenosis) (P = 0.32). In contrast, distraction superior to 8 mm was less effective (P ≤ 0.05). In multiple-level stenosis, decompression was significantly more effective than any degree of distraction (P < 0.001). No correlation of those results to disc height or lordosis was observed. Using χ trend test to analyze the effect of distraction, a linear trend favoring moderate over severe stenotic morphology was observed (P = 0.0349).
CONCLUSION: Interspinous distraction of 8 mm is sufficient to replicate electrophysiological improvements obtained during full decompression even in severe single-level stenosis but not in multilevel disease. Interspinous distraction has therefore an immediately measurable neurophysiological effect.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 4.

MeSH Term

Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Decompression, Surgical
Evoked Potentials, Motor
Female
Humans
Intraoperative Neurophysiological Monitoring
Lumbar Vertebrae
Male
Middle Aged
Outcome Assessment, Health Care
Postoperative Period
Preoperative Period
Prospective Studies
Prostheses and Implants
Reproducibility of Results
Severity of Illness Index
Spinal Stenosis

Word Cloud

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