Abstract

To analyse the clinical data of patients who developed incisional complications and those who did not develop incisional complications after lumbar internal fixation, and investigate the risk factors for incisional complications in patients after lumbar internal fixation with posterior midline incision. A standardised data collection form was used to collect the clinical data of patients who were admitted and underwent lumbar internal fixation in our hospital from July 2018 to July 2021. Patients who experienced any one of the incisional complications, such as incision exudates, swelling, blisters, bruising, superficial/deep incisional infections, poor healing and scarring, after surgery were included in the incisional complication group, and patients who did not develop the above-mentioned incisional complications were included in the control group. Univariate logistic regression analysis was first performed to identify potential risk factors, significant factors from univariate analysis were then included in multivariable logistic regression analysis to identify independent risk factors for incisional complications after lumbar spine surgery. Among 455 patients included in the study, postoperative incision complications occurred in 82 patients, with an incidence rate of 18.02%. Multivariate regression analysis identified seven independent risk factors for incisional complications: age, body mass index, preoperative albumin level, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, operation time and local anaesthetic infiltration at the incision site after surgery. Our findings documented that age, body mass index, preoperative albumin level, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, operation time, and postoperative local anaesthetic infiltration at the incision site were risk factors for incisional complications after lumbar internal fixation with posterior median incision. Awareness of these risk factors can enable surgeons to develop a more appropriate perioperative management plan for patients undergoing lumbar internal fixation, thus helping them recover faster.

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