Orthopaedic Surgery (Jun 2024)
Repeat Surgery after Percutaneous Endoscopic Lumbar Discectomy for Adolescent Lumbar Disc Herniation: A Multicenter Observational Study
Abstract
Objective The reported date in the repeat surgical intervention for adolescent lumbar disc herniation (ALDH) after percutaneous endoscopic lumbar discectomy (PELD) was quite scarce. This study aims to introduce cases of repeat surgeries after PELD for ALDH and assess the incidence, chief causes, repeat surgery methods, and surgical outcomes of repeat surgeries after PELD for ALDH. Methods A retrospective multicenter observational study was conducted on patients undergoing repeat surgeries after PELD for ALDH at four tertiary referral hospitals from January 2014 through August 2022. The incidence of repeat surgeries, chief causes, strategies for repeat surgeries, and timing of repeat surgeries were recorded and analyzed. The clinical outcomes were evaluated by the Numeric Rating Scales (NRS) scores and the modified MacNab criteria. Statistical analyses were performed with the Wilcoxon signed‐rank test. Results A total of 23 patients who underwent repeat surgeries after PELD for ALDH were included. The chief causes were re‐herniation (homo‐lateral re‐herniation at the same level, new disc herniation of adjacent level). The repeat surgery methods were revision PELD, micro‐endoscopic discectomy (MED), open discectomy and instrumented lumbar inter‐body fusion. The NRS scores decreased significantly in follow‐up evaluations and these scores demonstrated significant improvement at the last follow‐up (p < 0.002). For the modified MacNab criteria, at the last follow‐up, 18 patients (78.26%) had an excellent outcome, and the overall success rate was 86.95%. Conclusion This study's data suggest that young patients who underwent repeat surgery improved significantly compared to baseline. The chief cause was re‐herniation. Revision PELD was the main surgical procedure, which provides satisfactory clinical results in young patients who underwent repeat surgeries.
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