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To compare the functional results through the improvement of the Oswestry medium-term score of the lumbar arthrodesis performed to treat patients with lumbago and/or lumbar-radicular pain due to degenerative lesions of the lumbar spine: degenerative disc disease, osteoarthritis spondylolisthesis or adult dislocation scoliosis.
Full description
Lower back pain is the leading cause of disability in France for adults under 45 years of age. It is also the leading cause of work stoppage and reported occupational illnesses. Thus, the degenerative pathologies of the lumbar spine can be at the origin of a severe handicap resistant to well-conducted medical treatment. This is particularly the case for degenerative disc disease, osteoarthritic spondylolisthesis and scoliotic dislocations in adults.
If lumbar arthrodesis is a recognised solution in the surgical treatment of degenerative diseases of the lumbar spine when they become disabling despite medical treatment, the choice of the operative technique and approach used to achieve it is more dependent of the training that the practitioner benefited from than the guidelines derived from published prospective comparative scientific studies comparing the results of different surgical solutions.
Our hypothesis is that the functional and radiographic results of anterior lumbar arthrodesis techniques by minimally invasive approach may differ from those of conventional posterolateral arthrodesis.
We propose to compare the results of these two surgical techniques within the orthopedic and neurosurgeon team of the Institut Parisien du Dos, mastering these two approaches optimally by leaving them free to use them as they do daily without modifying their procedures. This should allow us to judge, in a well-defined population, whether one of the two techniques is superior to the other when performed by surgeons who are experienced in this surgery.
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Inclusion criteria
Patient requiring a lumbar arthrodesis to be carried out by one of the seven investigative surgeons of the Geoffroy Saint Hilaire Clinic IPAD study.
At least 18 years old (no upper age limit).
Patient with chronic lumbago or lumbar radiculopathy and resistant to a conservative medical treatment sufficiently carried out for at least 6 months, included alongside the usual analgesic, anti-inflammatory, infiltration and rehabilitation contraindications.
Patient whose lumbar and/or radicular VAS is greater than or equal to 50 mm
Patient whose Oswestry Index is greater than or equal to 40%
Patient responding on one anatomical level* to one of the following diagnoses:
Patient with health insurance or beneficiary of a social security scheme
Patient having been informed of and having agreed to the use of their health data (non-opposition)
Exclusion criteria
254 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Marie Barba; Jean Francois OUDET
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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