Abstract

Obesity and a prolonged surgical duration are reported risk factors for meralgia paresthetica (MP) after prone position surgery; however, this fails to explain why MP seldom occurs after prone position craniotomy. We reviewed the incidence of MP after spinal surgery and craniotomy in the prone position and investigated whether unidentified factors are involved in the mechanism of postoperative MP. Between January 2014 and March 2020, we performed 556 prone position surgeries. We excluded patients aged ≤16 years and those who were comatose or who required redo-surgery, and reviewed 446 eligible patients (124 who underwent craniotomies and 322 who underwent posterior spinal surgeries). Postoperative MP occurred in 46 (10.3%) patients with a higher incidence after spinal surgery than after craniotomy (13.7% vs. 1.6%, p < 0.001). Among the 322 patients who received posterior spinal surgery, thoracic and lumbar laminectomies were associated with a higher incidence of MP than cervical laminectomy. Analyses limited to those patients who received thoracic and lumbar laminectomies revealed that the preoperative thoracic kyphosis (TK) angle was significantly greater in patients with MP than in those without MP (average TK angle, 38.9° vs. 23.1°; p < 0.001), and that the preoperative lumbar lordosis angle did not significantly differ between the two groups. Apart from the known predisposing factors, we found that thoracolumbar-sacral laminectomy in patients with a greater TK angle is also a risk factor for MP after prone position surgery.

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