Vertebral Body Lavage Reduces Hemodynamic Response to Vertebral Body Augmentation With PMMA.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
August 2019
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Subject(s)
Series
Global spine journal
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2192-5682
Publisher
Sage
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
31431872
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
Study Design
Retrospective comparative study.
Objectives
To assess the effect of vertebral body lavage (VBL) on (1) systemic blood pressure, (2) heart rate, and (3) oxygen saturation following cement augmentation procedures for acute vertebral compression fractures (VCFs).
Methods
A total of 145 consecutive patients undergoing cement augmentation for acute VCF (mean age 74 ± 12 years, age range 42-96 years; 70% female; 475 levels treated) were allocated to the "lavage group" (n = 61 patients; VBL prior to cement application) and to the "control group" (n = 84 patients, no VBL). Mean arterial blood pressure (MAP), heart rate, and oxygen saturation were monitored immediately prior and 3 minutes after cement injection. Logistic regression analysis was performed with ΔMAP ≥10 mm Hg before and after cement injection as the dependent outcome variable and demographic, radiographic, and procedural factors as independent variables.
Results
MAP decreased by mean 3 ± 7.3 mm Hg before and after cement injection in the "lavage group" and 9 ± 10.5 mmHg in the control group (P < .001). There were no significant differences in terms of heart rate and oxygen saturation before and after cement application within each group, or between the 2 groups. Multivariate logistic regression analyses revealed VBL as an independent factor influencing MAP (adjusted odds ratio: 3.49 [confidence interval, 1.16-10.50], P = .03).
Conclusion
VBL prior to cement augmentation procedures reduces the hemodynamic response, most likely resulting from decreased amounts of bone marrow substance displaced into the circulation thereby decreasing the risk of pulmonary fat embolism syndrome.
Retrospective comparative study.
Objectives
To assess the effect of vertebral body lavage (VBL) on (1) systemic blood pressure, (2) heart rate, and (3) oxygen saturation following cement augmentation procedures for acute vertebral compression fractures (VCFs).
Methods
A total of 145 consecutive patients undergoing cement augmentation for acute VCF (mean age 74 ± 12 years, age range 42-96 years; 70% female; 475 levels treated) were allocated to the "lavage group" (n = 61 patients; VBL prior to cement application) and to the "control group" (n = 84 patients, no VBL). Mean arterial blood pressure (MAP), heart rate, and oxygen saturation were monitored immediately prior and 3 minutes after cement injection. Logistic regression analysis was performed with ΔMAP ≥10 mm Hg before and after cement injection as the dependent outcome variable and demographic, radiographic, and procedural factors as independent variables.
Results
MAP decreased by mean 3 ± 7.3 mm Hg before and after cement injection in the "lavage group" and 9 ± 10.5 mmHg in the control group (P < .001). There were no significant differences in terms of heart rate and oxygen saturation before and after cement application within each group, or between the 2 groups. Multivariate logistic regression analyses revealed VBL as an independent factor influencing MAP (adjusted odds ratio: 3.49 [confidence interval, 1.16-10.50], P = .03).
Conclusion
VBL prior to cement augmentation procedures reduces the hemodynamic response, most likely resulting from decreased amounts of bone marrow substance displaced into the circulation thereby decreasing the risk of pulmonary fat embolism syndrome.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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2192568218803106.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 271.64 KB | Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) | published |