Abstract

The observational data from the Spine Patient Outcomes Research Trial (SPORT) confirm the superiority of surgical over conservative management of symptomatic degenerative spondylolisthesis. The most common reported neurologic complications after lumbar posterior decompression and fusion are implant malposition, contralateral foraminal stenosis, hematoma/seroma, arachnoiditis, and nerve root oedema or vascular underlying causes. The current study reported that the patient developed unexpected left side neurological deficit after conventional lumbar posterior spinal decompression surgery for degenerative spondylolisthesis. No intraoperative dural insult. The computer topography (CT) scan and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the spine after index surgery show adequate canal and foraminal decompression. No hardware-related complications or compressive hematoma could explain the patient’s symptoms. The patient recovered completely after removing the redundant posterolateral bone graft. The theory behind that is aggressive posterolateral dissection over the transverse process and abundant application of the bone graft might compress or injure the lumbar plexus. So, we suggested a delicate dissection posterolaterally and only a reasonable amount of bone graft could be applied to prevent such a devastating neurological complication.

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