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Sacroiliac joint pain after lumbar spine fusion for degenerative diseases: A Sacroiliac joint pain after lumbar spine fusion for degenerative diseases: A

Sacroiliac joint pain after lumbar spine fusion for degenerative diseases: A - PowerPoint Presentation

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Uploaded On 2022-06-15

Sacroiliac joint pain after lumbar spine fusion for degenerative diseases: A - PPT Presentation

systematic review Jesse Shen Mathieu BoudierReveret Van Tri Truong Carl Majdalani Zhi Wang Disclosures Objectives The objective of this systematic review is to determine the incidence of sacroiliac joint SIJ pain after lumbosacral spinal fusion ID: 918349

joint pain patients fusion pain joint fusion patients sacroiliac sacrum sij spine lumbar quality systematic incidence identified lumbosacral fixation

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Presentation Transcript

Slide1

Sacroiliac joint pain after lumbar spine fusion for degenerative diseases: A systematic review

Jesse Shen, Mathieu Boudier-Reveret, Van Tri Truong, Carl Majdalani, Zhi Wang

Slide2

Disclosures

Slide3

Objectives

The objective of this systematic review is to determine the incidence of sacroiliac joint (SIJ) pain after lumbosacral spinal fusion. The hypothesis is that patients with lumbar fixation extended to the sacrum have higher incidence of SIJ pain compared to those without sacral fixation.A secondary objective was to determine diagnostic criteria for SIJ pain and sacroiliac dysfunction.

Slide4

MethodsPROPSERO

registered systematic reviewSystematic search of the English literature in Embase, Pubmed

, Cochrane Library databases.Articles were included if they

reported

sacroiliac

joint pain

after

lumbar

spine

fusion

Newcastle-Ottawa

scale

was

used

to

appraise

the

quality

of

studies

Slide5

Slide6

Results

12 articles of low to moderate quality of evidence were included

Incidence of SI joint pain1292 patients without extension of fusion to sacrum identified101 patients with SI joint pain

identified

(7.8%)

1215 patients

with

extension of fusion to sacrum

identified

120 patients

with

SI joint pain

identified

(9.8%)

Slide7

Results

Diagnostic criteriaHeterogenous usage of fluoroscopic guided SI joint block for diagnose of SI joint pain post-operatively

Multiple clinical criteria and scales available for diagnosis

of SI joint pain

Heterogeneity

I

2

statistic of 88%

Slide8

Conclusion

The current literature on SIJ pain after lumbar spine surgery is of poor quality. Patients with extended fusion to sacrum may have increased sacroiliac joint pain. Prospective work is needed

to evaluate SI joint pain after lumbosacral spine fusion