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Postoperative computed tomography three months after lumbar disc surgery. A prospective single-blind study

T T Jensen, S Overgaard, N O Thomsen, S Kramp, O F Petersen, J H Hansen

18 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

In a prospective single-blind study, 60 patients surgically treated for lumbar disc herniation underwent clinical examination and computed tomography preoperatively and 3 months after surgery. At follow-up (58 patients; median, 31 months; range, 21-37 months), 29 patients had an excellent outcome (51%), 20 improved (33%), and 9 were unchanged or worse (16%). Dural or radicular scar tissue was present by computed tomography in 88% of the patients, but the findings could not be correlated with the clinical outcome. Recurrent or persistent disc herniation was found in 9% of the patients. The clinical outcome of patients with abnormal computed tomography did not differ significantly from patients without this finding. A relation between facet joint degeneration and less successful clinical outcome was demonstrated. Computed tomography (without contrast) 3 months after surgery gave little information which could be correlated with the clinical outcome. Patients with an excellent outcome had all degrees of intraspinal scar tissue.

Original languageEnglish
JournalSpine
Volume16
Issue number6
Pages (from-to)620-2
Number of pages3
ISSN0362-2436
Publication statusPublished - Jun 1991
Externally publishedYes

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