Lumbar Fusion Has Long-Term Benefits
Main Category: Back PainArticle Date: 16 Dec 2008 - 2:00 PDT
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Lumbar fusion is becoming an increasingly common treatment for low-back pain, but its long-term effects are relatively unknown. A doctoral thesis from the Swedish medical university Karolinska Institutet now shows that the long-term effects are superior to those of physiotherapy.
Chronic low-back pain is treated increasingly often with lumbar fusion, by which several lower back vertebrae are fused in a way that has little impact on the back's overall mobility. Lumbar fusion has been shown to relieve pain in the short term, but no studies have examined the long-term effects of the operation and compared them with alternative, non-surgical treatments like physiotherapy.
Per Ekman is a surgeon at Stockholm South General Hospital (Södersjukhuset), and has shown in his doctoral thesis that patients who have undergone lumbar fusion also improve in the longer term. His results are based on an evaluation of 111 patients, randomly assigned treatment with lumbar fusion or physiotherapy. On a follow-up nine years later, 76 per cent of the surgical group stated that they felt better than before the operation, compared with only 50 per cent of the physiotherapy group.
"Whether lumbar fusion should be used at all for this type of back pain has long been the subject of much debate," says Dr Ekman. "My studies suggest that most patients who have undergone lumbar fusion actually feel better, and that the operation carries no great risk. However, long-term improvements are often relatively modest, and the operation should also continue to be used as a complement to physiotherapy when this treatment doesn't help."
His thesis shows that men, the physically active and the gainfully employed have somewhat higher chances of benefitting from the operation than others.
"This tells us something, but unfortunately there are still no good methods for finding those with the best chances of responding well to the operation," says Dr Ekman.
Thesis: Lumbar fusion for chronic low-back pain in isthmic spondylolisthesis, Per Ekman, Department of Clinical Sciences, Intervention and Technology, Karolinska Institutet.
Karolinska Institutet is one of the leading medical universities in Europe. Through research, education and information, Karolinska Institutet contributes to improving human health. Each year, the Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet awards the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Karolinska Institutet
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (1)
Going Against The Stream Of Current Opinion
posted by Stephen M. Taylor D.O. on 26 Jan 2009 at 12:38 pmAs a Pain Medicine specialist I must say that I am skeptical of these findings. It certainly make a nice headline but even a cursory look at the literature on this topic shows little evidence to support the author;s conclusions.
I tell my patients that spinal surgery has two purposes: to relieve pressure on a nerve root and to stabilize a biomechanically unstable spine.
Even if one or both of these goals is successfully surgically accomplished there is no robust data that showing that it relieves pain. Damage to the nerve root, spinal cord and physiological changes in the brain can cause the pain memory to linger.
Also, I was unable to see how patients were selected and simply classifying patients as having low back pain or not is far to broad a category.
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