Biblio Cheri
Biblio Cheri
Biblio Cheri
2
Abstract
3
Annotated Bibliography
Crawford,C., Carreon, L., Djurasovic, M., & Glassman, S. (2008). Lumbar fusion outcomes in
patients with rheumatoid arthritis. European Spine Journal, 17(6), 822-5.
doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00586-008-0610-4
Rheumatoid arthritis patients often experience a higher rate of complications
after lumbar fusion surgery, secondary to osteopenia and immunosuppression that are
frequent comorbidities to RA, however treatment outcomes have not been compared
(Crawford, Carreon, Djurasovic & Glassman, 2008).
The authors describe a retrospective study comparing outcomes of lumbar fusion
surgery between patients with and without a diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis(RA). RA
patients were matched for age, gender, smoking status, level of surgery, & date to nonRA patients who also received posterolateral lumbar fusion. All patients received
antibiotics pre-operative to 2 days post-operative and physical therapy with
mobilization on the first day after surgery. They reported that the treatment outcomes of
both groups were similar, with the RA group showing slightly better results; 74%
compared to 63% of non-RA patients received good to excellent results. In this study
there were no significant differences in complications or non-fusion rates between
groups.
Nielsen, P., Jorgensen, L., Dahl, B., Pedersen, T., & Tonnesen, H. (2010). Prehabilitation and
early rehabilitation after spinal surgery: Randomized clinical trial. Clinical
Rehabilitation, 24(2), 137-48. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0269215509347432
Soegaard, R., Christensen, F., Lauersen, I., & Bnger, C. (2006). Lumbar spinal fusion patients'
demands to the primary health sector: Evaluation of three rehabilitation protocols. A
prospective randomized study. European Spine Journal, 15(5), 648-56.
doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00586-005-0884-8
In a prospective, randomized study with a 2-year follow-up, Soegaard,
Christensen, Lauersen, & Bnger (2006) compared three rehabilitation protocols for the
post-surgical treatment of lumbar fusion patients. Ninety middle-aged patients were
randomly allocated to three treatment groups; a video group, a caf group, and a training
group. The video group was given one-time oral instructions by a physiotherapist and
given a home-exercise video. The caf group was given the same instructions and home
exercise; additionally, they attended three group support meetings with other spinal
fusion patients.
The training group received individualized training for one hour, twice per week
for 8 weeks, including: conditioning; dynamic endurance focusing on back, abdominals,
and legs; and stretching exercises. The researchers approached this study as a costanalysis from the healthcare sectors point of view, with patient demands for further
service being a key measure. The conclusion was that both the caf group and the
training group were more cost effective than the video group. The researchers
highlighted the effect of a limited behavioral intervention (caf group meetings) on cost
savings.
Although this study used younger subjects (median age of 47), it supports the use
of therapeutic exercise for lumbar fusion rehabilitation, both in efficacy and costeffectiveness.
Tarnanen, S., Neva, M., Dekker, J., Hkkinen, K., Vihtonen, K., Pekkanen, L., & Hkkinen, A.
(2012). Randomized controlled trial of postoperative exercise rehabilitation program after
lumbar spine fusion: Study protocol. BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders, 13, 123.
doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2474-13-123
Tarnanen et al (2012) propose a treatment regimen for rehabilitation after lumbar
spine fusion to be compared with a control group receiving the standard treatment. The
proposed program consists of specific back strengthening exercises, aerobic training,
and patient education on control to maintain a neutral lumbar spine position. Exercises
are progressed in 6 phases of rehabilitation, with body position and purpose of each
exercise noted.
The actual RCT study has not yet been published. This is just a protocol for an
intended study, however, this article gives a good summary of background information.