Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part 1 Perioperative Care of the Surgical Patient
- Part 2 Surgical Procedures and their Complications
- Section 17 General Surgery
- Section 18 Cardiothoracic Surgery
- Section 19 Vascular Surgery
- Section 20 Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
- Section 21 Gynecologic Surgery
- Section 22 Neurologic Surgery
- Section 23 Ophthalmic Surgery
- Section 24 Orthopedic Surgery
- Chapter 116 Arthroscopic knee surgery
- Chapter 117 Total knee replacement
- Chapter 118 Total hip replacement
- Chapter 119 Fractures of the femoral shaft
- Chapter 120 Hip fractures
- Chapter 121 Lumbar spine surgery
- Chapter 122 Surgery for adult spinal deformity (scoliosis or kyphosis)
- Chapter 123 Cervical spine surgery
- Chapter 124 Surgery of the foot and ankle
- Chapter 125 Lower extremity amputations
- Chapter 126 Surgical procedures for rheumatoid arthritis
- Section 25 Otolaryngologic Surgery
- Section 26 Urologic Surgery
- Index
- References
Chapter 121 - Lumbar spine surgery
from Section 24 - Orthopedic Surgery
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2013
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part 1 Perioperative Care of the Surgical Patient
- Part 2 Surgical Procedures and their Complications
- Section 17 General Surgery
- Section 18 Cardiothoracic Surgery
- Section 19 Vascular Surgery
- Section 20 Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
- Section 21 Gynecologic Surgery
- Section 22 Neurologic Surgery
- Section 23 Ophthalmic Surgery
- Section 24 Orthopedic Surgery
- Chapter 116 Arthroscopic knee surgery
- Chapter 117 Total knee replacement
- Chapter 118 Total hip replacement
- Chapter 119 Fractures of the femoral shaft
- Chapter 120 Hip fractures
- Chapter 121 Lumbar spine surgery
- Chapter 122 Surgery for adult spinal deformity (scoliosis or kyphosis)
- Chapter 123 Cervical spine surgery
- Chapter 124 Surgery of the foot and ankle
- Chapter 125 Lower extremity amputations
- Chapter 126 Surgical procedures for rheumatoid arthritis
- Section 25 Otolaryngologic Surgery
- Section 26 Urologic Surgery
- Index
- References
Summary
Lumbar surgery in adults can be divided into three general levels of complexity and associated morbidity. The first, an operation to treat herniated lumbar nucleus pulposus, is relatively straightforward from a medical management perspective. The second, an operation for multilevel lumbar stenosis, is usually more involved and tends to be performed for older patients with more comorbidities. The most complicated surgeries are fusion surgeries, which may be carried out with a posterior or anterior approach, or with both approaches.
Patients with a lumbar disc herniation present with radiculopathy in a dermatomal pattern, and may exhibit motor weakness or reflex changes which correspond to the anatomic level of neural compression. The patient is typically a young adult in good health. Axial back pain is not a predominant symptom of this condition and is generally unimproved with a discectomy. If the symptoms produced by lumbar disc herniation fail to respond to appropriate non-operative therapy, laminotomy and discectomy are indicated. Patients are placed either prone or in the knee–chest position on a specially designed operating table; the latter position affords decompression of the abdominal cavity and the epidural veins. The procedure is performed with either loupe magnification or use of the surgical microscope through a posterior midline incision measuring 2.5–5 cm. The operative level is confirmed radiographically to prevent harm to an otherwise normal intervertebral disc. Blood loss is minimal and the total anesthetic time is usually 1–2 hours. A subset of these patients will present with acutely worsening neurologic dysfunction with or without cauda equina syndrome. In these cases, the herniated nuclear fragment is so large that it causes ischemia of the nerve roots. Although unusual, this situation is a true surgical emergency and requires prompt clinical diagnosis to give the patient the best chance of neurologic recovery.
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- Information
- Medical Management of the Surgical PatientA Textbook of Perioperative Medicine, pp. 727 - 731Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013