A new study published in Clinical Spine Surgery examines acute complications among spinal deformity surgical patients who are 70 years old or older.
The researchers examined 20 patients who were 76.6 years old on
average and followed them for six months. The patients underwent
instrumented posterior spinal fusions and the same surgeon performed all
procedures. The researchers found:
1. The patients reported four comorbidities on average and their American Society of Anesthesiologists score was 2.7.
2. The weight comorbidity index was low at 1.05 with a range of 0 to four.
3. The patients underwent at least six-level fusions; the average
fusion was 10.75 levels with a range of six to 15 levels fused.
4. There were complications in 95 percent of the patients; nine of those complications were major in seven patients.
5. The article authors concluded spinal deformity surgery poses risks
regardless of the age, however the risks are "believed to increase" as
patients get older and the procedure becomes more complex.
"Our results show that, although the risks of major complications are
significant, the risk is not greater than in a young population
undergoing the similar procedures," concluded the study authors. "We
feel that age alone should not be a contraindication for patients in
their eighth decade of life who are incapacitated by their painful
spinal deformity."
Source : Beckers Spine , 23rd Sep 2016
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