Abstract

BackgroundLateral lumbar interbody fusion (LLIF) is a minimally invasive surgical option for treating symptomatic degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis (DLSS) in select patients. However, the efficacy of LLIF for indirectly decompressing the lumbar spine in DLSS, as well as the best radiographic metrics for evaluating such changes, are incompletely understood. MethodsA single-institutional cohort of patients who underwent LLIF for DLSS between 5/2015 – 12/2019 was retrospectively reviewed. Diameter, area, and stenosis grades were measured for the central canal (CC) and neural foramina (NF) at each LLIF level based on preoperative and postoperative T2-weighted MRI. Baseline facet joint (FJ) space, degree of FJ osteoarthritis, presence of spondylolisthesis, interbody graft position, and posterior disc height were analyzed as potential predictors of radiographic outcomes. Changes to all metrics after LLIF were analyzed and compared across lumbar levels. Preoperative and intraoperative predictors of decompression were then assessed using multivariate linear regression. ResultsA total of 102 patients comprising 153 fused levels were analyzed. Pairwise linear regression of stenosis grade to diameter and area revealed significant correlations for both the CC and NF. All metrics except CC area were significantly improved after LLIF (p < 0.05, 2-tailed t-test). Worse FJ osteoarthritis ipsilateral to the surgical approach was predictive of greater post-operative CC and NF stenosis grade (p < 0.05, univariate and multivariate ordinary least squares linear regression). Lumbar levels L3-5 had significantly higher absolute postoperative CC stenosis grades while relative change in CC stenosis at the L2-3 was significantly greater than other lumbar levels (p < 0.05, one-way ANOVA). There were no baseline or postoperative differences in NF stenosis grade across lumbar levels. ConclusionsRadiographically, LLIF is effective at indirect compression of the CC and NF at all lumbar levels, though worse FJ osteoarthritis predicted higher degrees of post-operative stenosis.

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