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Lumbar disc herniation surgery

Strömqvist, Fredrik LU (2017)
Abstract
Lumbar disc herniation (LDH) most commonly affects individuals in their early forties but can occur at any age. In most instances,
the initial treatment is non-surgical and a clear majority of the patients recover with this management. Surgical treatment is
generally an option first after 6-8 weeks of non-surgical management with unsuccessful outcome in terms of pain, disability and
quality of life. The long-term outcome is not different when surgical- and non-surgical treatment are compared. Surgical treatment
generally yields a satisfying outcome and shortens the period with severe morbidity. There are however many factors that influence
the surgical outcome and by identifying these, it is possible to make a better... (More)
Lumbar disc herniation (LDH) most commonly affects individuals in their early forties but can occur at any age. In most instances,
the initial treatment is non-surgical and a clear majority of the patients recover with this management. Surgical treatment is
generally an option first after 6-8 weeks of non-surgical management with unsuccessful outcome in terms of pain, disability and
quality of life. The long-term outcome is not different when surgical- and non-surgical treatment are compared. Surgical treatment
generally yields a satisfying outcome and shortens the period with severe morbidity. There are however many factors that influence
the surgical outcome and by identifying these, it is possible to make a better patient selection for surgery. Further, the information
given to patients when scheduled for surgery is of significant importance for the patients expectations as well as the surgical
outcome.
In papers I, II and III we analyzed data from surgically treated LDH patients included in the national Swedish Spine Register, with
special interest in the effect of age and gender. In paper IV we analyzed changes in clinical status in patients operated due to LDH,
from before surgery to postoperatively and during the first two postoperative weeks. Preoperative SweSpine data was obtained as
baseline comparison and all patients were interviewed postoperatively at day 1, 7 and 14 following surgery (pain, consumption of
analgesics and quality of life).
In paper I we found that there was significant preoperative impairment in children and adolescents who were surgically treated due
to LDH, with girls reporting a more severe clinical impairment. Improvement by surgery was no different in boys and girls and
surgery was associated with a low complication rate. Pain, quality of life and disability was virtually normalized one year after the
operation.
In paper II, we found that patients were with higher ages referred to surgery with a more severe preoperative clinical impairment,
that the improvement after surgery was inferior in patients with higher age and that the one year outcome following this was inferior
with increasing age of the patient. There was also a higher frequency of complications with increasing age.
In paper III, we found that females surgically treated due to LDH report inferior preoperative clinical status, that both genders
improve to a similar extent after surgery and that the one year outcome following this was inferior in females.
In paper IV, we found that leg pain improved directly by surgery, that back pain improved gradually during the first two
postoperative weeks and that quality of life improved directly after surgery but also continued to improve during the following two
weeks. The patients had already at two weeks after the operation reached the in the literature defined criteria for “successful
outcome” of LDH surgery.
In conclusion, the outcome of LDH surgery is encouraging in children and adolescents. There is age- and gender related outcome
differences, but these differences are of minor clinical relevance since both elderly and females in general reach the improvement
that in the literature is defined as a “clinical successful outcome” and this already within two weeks after the operation. We are of
the opinion that age and gender should, if anything, only to minor extent influence the decision making regarding if LDH surgery
should be performed or not. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • professor Brisby, Helena, University of Gothenburg
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Lumbar disc herniation surgery, outcome, PROMs, gender differences
pages
94 pages
publisher
Lund University: Faculty of Medicine
defense location
Conference Hall at the Department of Orthopedics, Inga Marie Nilssons gata 22, Skåne University Hospital, Malmö.
defense date
2017-05-12 09:00:00
external identifiers
  • scopus:85029830975
ISBN
978-91-7619-450-8
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
ISSN: 1652-8220 Lund University, Faculty of Medicine Doctoral Dissertation Series 2017:70
id
13d746f4-9640-4074-a610-be7ce3b1eba3
date added to LUP
2017-04-03 16:09:10
date last changed
2024-01-13 18:08:55
@phdthesis{13d746f4-9640-4074-a610-be7ce3b1eba3,
  abstract     = {{Lumbar disc herniation (LDH) most commonly affects individuals in their early forties but can occur at any age. In most instances,<br/>the initial treatment is non-surgical and a clear majority of the patients recover with this management. Surgical treatment is<br/>generally an option first after 6-8 weeks of non-surgical management with unsuccessful outcome in terms of pain, disability and<br/>quality of life. The long-term outcome is not different when surgical- and non-surgical treatment are compared. Surgical treatment<br/>generally yields a satisfying outcome and shortens the period with severe morbidity. There are however many factors that influence<br/>the surgical outcome and by identifying these, it is possible to make a better patient selection for surgery. Further, the information<br/>given to patients when scheduled for surgery is of significant importance for the patients expectations as well as the surgical<br/>outcome.<br/>In papers I, II and III we analyzed data from surgically treated LDH patients included in the national Swedish Spine Register, with<br/>special interest in the effect of age and gender. In paper IV we analyzed changes in clinical status in patients operated due to LDH,<br/>from before surgery to postoperatively and during the first two postoperative weeks. Preoperative SweSpine data was obtained as<br/>baseline comparison and all patients were interviewed postoperatively at day 1, 7 and 14 following surgery (pain, consumption of<br/>analgesics and quality of life).<br/>In paper I we found that there was significant preoperative impairment in children and adolescents who were surgically treated due<br/>to LDH, with girls reporting a more severe clinical impairment. Improvement by surgery was no different in boys and girls and<br/>surgery was associated with a low complication rate. Pain, quality of life and disability was virtually normalized one year after the<br/>operation.<br/>In paper II, we found that patients were with higher ages referred to surgery with a more severe preoperative clinical impairment,<br/>that the improvement after surgery was inferior in patients with higher age and that the one year outcome following this was inferior<br/>with increasing age of the patient. There was also a higher frequency of complications with increasing age.<br/>In paper III, we found that females surgically treated due to LDH report inferior preoperative clinical status, that both genders<br/>improve to a similar extent after surgery and that the one year outcome following this was inferior in females.<br/>In paper IV, we found that leg pain improved directly by surgery, that back pain improved gradually during the first two<br/>postoperative weeks and that quality of life improved directly after surgery but also continued to improve during the following two<br/>weeks. The patients had already at two weeks after the operation reached the in the literature defined criteria for “successful<br/>outcome” of LDH surgery.<br/>In conclusion, the outcome of LDH surgery is encouraging in children and adolescents. There is age- and gender related outcome<br/>differences, but these differences are of minor clinical relevance since both elderly and females in general reach the improvement<br/>that in the literature is defined as a “clinical successful outcome” and this already within two weeks after the operation. We are of<br/>the opinion that age and gender should, if anything, only to minor extent influence the decision making regarding if LDH surgery<br/>should be performed or not.}},
  author       = {{Strömqvist, Fredrik}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-7619-450-8}},
  keywords     = {{Lumbar disc herniation surgery, outcome, PROMs, gender differences}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Lund University: Faculty of Medicine}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{Lumbar disc herniation surgery}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/23510496/kappa_e_spik.pdf}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}