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The purpose of this study is to compare safety and outcomes of the following treatments of lumbar disc herniation: (1) discectomy with posterior dynamic stabilization with those of (2) discectomy alone or (3) discectomy with internal fixation and fusion.
Discectomy with posterior dynamic stabilization is proposed as the most effective treatment to improve range of motion, and to be similarly effective to discectomy alone and discectomy with internal fixation and fusion for other functional outcomes after surgery.
Full description
The purpose of this study is to compare outcomes of (1) discectomy with posterior dynamic stabilization with those of (2) discectomy alone or (3) discectomy with internal fixation and fusion.
Study aims are:
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Inclusion criteria
Signed informed consent
Age between 20 and 60 years inclusive
Radiographic evidence of single level lumbar disc herniation
Scheduled for single-level lumbar discectomy with or without fusion or dynamic stabilization
Preoperative ODI ≥ 30
Clinical symptoms consistent with lumbar disc herniation determined by history or physical exam:
Involved disk at the spinal level between L2 and S1
Failed to gain adequate symptom relief from at least one month of adequate non-operative treatment, except in patients with severe symptoms that require immediate surgery (at surgeon's discretion)
Absence of significant symptomatic adjacent segment disk herniation
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
195 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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