Persistent local pain after posterior spine surgery for thoracic lesions

Many surgeons have investigated local pain associated with posterior spine surgery for cervical or lumbar lesions. However, little information is available concerning local pain after posterior thoracic spine surgery. This prospective study was, thus, performed to investigate the frequency and clini...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of spinal disorders & techniques 2007-05, Vol.20 (3), p.226-232
Hauptverfasser: Sakaura, Hironobu, Hosono, Noboru, Mukai, Yoshihiro, Fujii, Ryutaro, Iwasaki, Motoki, Yoshikawa, Hideki
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container_issue 3
container_start_page 226
container_title Journal of spinal disorders & techniques
container_volume 20
creator Sakaura, Hironobu
Hosono, Noboru
Mukai, Yoshihiro
Fujii, Ryutaro
Iwasaki, Motoki
Yoshikawa, Hideki
description Many surgeons have investigated local pain associated with posterior spine surgery for cervical or lumbar lesions. However, little information is available concerning local pain after posterior thoracic spine surgery. This prospective study was, thus, performed to investigate the frequency and clinical features of local pain after posterior spine surgery for thoracic lesions. In 29 consecutive patients undergoing posterior spine surgery for various thoracic spinal disorders, local pain was investigated before and after surgery. In all 19 patients with preoperative back pain presumably due to thoracic lesions, pain was well alleviated after surgery. In contrast, 6 patients (21%) newly developed persistent shoulder angle pain after surgery, which resembled axial pain after cervical laminoplasty. In 5 of these 6 patients surgical exposure was extended to the cervicothoracic junction, whereas persistent shoulder angle pain was independent of disease etiologies and surgical procedure, and all of the 5 patients had no other etiologies of local pain such as surgical site infections, hardware failures, pseudoarthrosis, other metastasis, and vertebral fractures. These results suggest that dissection of muscle attachments to the cervicothoracic junction would play some part in the development of persistent local pain after posterior spine surgery for thoracic lesions, although surgical exposure of the zygapophysial joints at the cervicothoracic junction might be a possible source of postoperative shoulder pain. Therefore, to minimize such surgical complications, muscle insertions into the cervicothoracic junction should be preserved as far as possible.
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In 5 of these 6 patients surgical exposure was extended to the cervicothoracic junction, whereas persistent shoulder angle pain was independent of disease etiologies and surgical procedure, and all of the 5 patients had no other etiologies of local pain such as surgical site infections, hardware failures, pseudoarthrosis, other metastasis, and vertebral fractures. These results suggest that dissection of muscle attachments to the cervicothoracic junction would play some part in the development of persistent local pain after posterior spine surgery for thoracic lesions, although surgical exposure of the zygapophysial joints at the cervicothoracic junction might be a possible source of postoperative shoulder pain. 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subjects Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Back Pain - etiology
Back Pain - physiopathology
Cervical Vertebrae - anatomy & histology
Cervical Vertebrae - physiopathology
Cervical Vertebrae - surgery
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Muscle, Skeletal - injuries
Muscle, Skeletal - physiopathology
Muscle, Skeletal - surgery
Neurosurgical Procedures - adverse effects
Nociceptors - physiology
Pain, Intractable - etiology
Pain, Intractable - physiopathology
Postoperative Complications - etiology
Postoperative Complications - physiopathology
Prospective Studies
Shoulder Pain - etiology
Shoulder Pain - physiopathology
Thoracic Vertebrae - anatomy & histology
Thoracic Vertebrae - physiopathology
Thoracic Vertebrae - surgery
Zygapophyseal Joint - physiopathology
Zygapophyseal Joint - surgery
title Persistent local pain after posterior spine surgery for thoracic lesions
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