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      Percutaneous endoscopic discectomy in adolescent lumbar disc herniation: a 3- to 5-year study.

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          Abstract

          OBJECTIVEThe authors sought to investigate the efficiency of percutaneous endoscopic discectomy (PED) in adolescent patients with lumbar disc herniation (LDH), compare PED outcomes in adolescent patients with those in young adult LDH patients as controls, and discuss relevant technical notes.METHODSThis was a retrospective study involving 19 adolescent LDH patients (age > 13 and < 18 years, 20 discectomies) and 38 young adults (age < 40 years, 38 discectomies) who also had LDH and were matched to the adolescent group for sex and body mass index. The combined cohort included 51 male patients (89.5%) and 6 female patients (10.5%), with an average age of 26.7 years (range 14-39 years). The operated levels included L3-4 in 1 patient (1.7%), L4-5 in 22 patients (37.9%), and L5-S1 in 35 patients (60.4%). Two adolescents (10.5%) exhibited apophyseal ring separation and one (5.3%) had had previous PED. All patients underwent PED under local anesthesia. Outcomes were evaluated through a visual analog scale (VAS), the Japanese Orthopaedic Association (JOA) scoring system, and the modified MacNab grading system.RESULTSThe mean duration of follow-up was 41.7 months (range 36-65 months). The outcomes in adolescents were satisfactory and comparable with previously reported outcomes of microsurgical discectomy (MD) and conventional open discectomy (COD). The adolescent patients had a faster and better recovery course than the adult patients (p < 0.01). One adolescent patient (5.3%) exhibited recurrence and 2 adults (5.3%) experienced transient dysesthesia; the complication rates were comparable in the 2 age groups (p = 0.47). Prolonged duration of symptoms (p < 0.01) and disc degeneration (p = 0.01) were correlated with lower postoperative JOA values; patients with extrusions had higher postoperative JOA values than those with protrusions (p = 0.01).CONCLUSIONSPED may yield favorable results in the treatment of adolescent LDH in terms of short- to medium-term follow-up; restricted discectomy and a conservative rehabilitation program might be advisable. Further long-term studies are warranted to address this rare disease entity.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Neurosurg Pediatr
          Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics
          Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)
          1933-0715
          1933-0707
          November 02 2018
          : 23
          : 2
          Article
          2018.8.PEDS18442
          10.3171/2018.8.PEDS18442
          30485217
          e701cbf8-d25e-4ebd-8bd6-7b1c1c71d184
          History

          JOA = Japanese Orthopaedic Association,percutaneous,minimally invasive surgical procedures,intervertebral disc,discectomy,adolescent,VAS = visual analog scale,PED = percutaneous endoscopic discectomy,MD = microsurgical discectomy,LDH = lumbar disc herniation,COD = conventional open discectomy,BMI = body mass index,spine

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