Revisional lumbar microdiscectomy: an analysis of operative findings and clinical outcome
- PMID: 8719827
- DOI: 10.1080/02688699550040684
Revisional lumbar microdiscectomy: an analysis of operative findings and clinical outcome
Abstract
Forty-one consecutive patients who underwent a revision microlumbar exploration for recurrent or persistent sciatica were reviewed retrospectively to analyse the operative findings and assess the clinical outcome following surgery. Thirty-three (80%) patients were found to have a recurrent intervertebral disc protrusion at the previous site, two patients had a disc herniation at a new site, one had severe perineural scarring, two had lateral recess stenosis, one patient had undergone previous exploration at an incorrect site and in two patients no cause for ongoing symptoms was found. Nineteen of the 33 patients with a re-prolapse presented with persistent or recurrent sciatica within 1 year of their first operation. The other 14 patients presented with a late re-prolapse (after 1 year) and their clinical outcome was better than for those patients with an early re-prolapse (12/14 vs 11/19 satisfactory result, respectively). The result of operating on patients with a late re-prolapse was comparable to the 80-95% satisfactory outcomes following primary lumbar microdiscectomy reported by other authors.
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