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Study on the Treatment of Degenerative Lumbar Spine Stenosis With a Percutaneous Interspinous Implant

U

University of Cologne

Status and phase

Terminated
Phase 4

Conditions

Lumbar Spinal Stenosis

Treatments

Procedure: Spacer
Other: physiotherapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01057641
PI-DLSS

Details and patient eligibility

About

Neurogenic intermittent claudication is a specific symptom complex occurring in patients with lumbar spinal stenosis. Characteristic of this disease is the occurrence of increasing leg, buttock or groin pain with or without lower back pain when walking a certain distance or reclining. Bending forward or sitting leads to a rapid pain relief. Lumbar spinal stenosis is defined as a reduction of the diameter of the spinal canal. The mechanism leading to stenosis is a remodeling and overgrowth of the spinal canal with osteophyte formation. Any loss of tissue or decrease of the disc height results in a relative laxity of the ligament structures and accelerates the degeneration of the spinal joints. As a therapy option, conservative therapy with oral analgesics and physical therapy is considered. This treatment can be intensified by adding epidural pain treatment. Is the conservative treatment not successful surgical intervention is necessary. In patients over 65 years of age operative decompression of the lumbar spinal stenosis constitutes the most common surgical operation of the spine. A relatively new therapy alternative is the interspinous process decompression (IPD). Studies have shown that the IPDs prevent narrowing of the spinal canal and neural foramens. The study is intended as a randomised, monocentre study to investigate the safety and the benefit of a minimally invasive percutaneous IPD-device in comparison with the best non-surgical operative treatment of lumbar spinal stenosis.

Enrollment

22 patients

Sex

All

Ages

50 to 99 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Male or female over 50 years of age
  2. One, two, or three segment degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis (DLSS)
  3. Symptoms of radiographically confirmed DLSS like leg, buttock, or groin pain with or without back pain and absence of a peripheral motoric deficit
  4. Pain relief in inclination or sitting
  5. Ability to walk over a distance of 50 m
  6. Unsuccessful conservative therapy for 3 months under outpatient conditions
  7. Informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  1. Fixed motoric deficit
  2. Cauda equina syndrome
  3. Previous surgery of the lumbar spine
  4. Severe osteoporosis of the vertebrae and/or of the hip
  5. Spondylolisthesis more severe than Meyerding I (on scale of I-IV)
  6. Metastasis of the vertebrae
  7. Mentally disabled persons

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

22 participants in 2 patient groups

Spacer
Experimental group
Description:
Implantation of a percutaneously implanted interspinous device ("spacer")
Treatment:
Procedure: Spacer
physiotherapy
Other group
Description:
The control group will receive at least physiotherapy and physical therapy (e.g. massage and fango). Under inpatient conditions therapy will last for seven days. After discharge physical therapy has to be continued for 5 weeks. A schedule will ensure the consistency of the physical therapy. The inpatient-treatment can be repeated every 6 months if necessary.
Treatment:
Other: physiotherapy

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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