EFORT Open Reviews (Feb 2023)

The ideal patient positioning in spine surgery: a preventive strategy

  • Paulo Diogo Cunha,
  • Tiago P Barbosa,
  • Guilherme Correia,
  • Rafaela Silva,
  • Nuno Cruz Oliveira,
  • Pedro Varanda,
  • Bruno Direito-Santos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1530/EOR-22-0135
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 2
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Patient positioning on the surgical table is a critical step in every spine surgery. The most common surgical positions in spine surgery are supine, prone and lateral decubitus. There are countless lesions that can occur during spine surgery due to patient mispositioning. Ulnar nerve and brachial plexus injuries are the most common nerve lesions seen in malpositioned patients. Devastating complications due to increased intraocular pressure or excessive abdominal pressure can also occur in prone decubitus and are real concerns that the surgical team must be aware of. All members of the surgical team (including surgeons, anesthesiologists and nurses) should know how to correctly position the patient, identify possible positioning errors and know how to avoid them in order to prevent postoperative morbidity. This work pretends to do a review of the most common positions during spine surgery, alert to errors that can happen during the procedure and how to avoid them.

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