Outcome of long-axis percutaneous sacroplasty as first-line treatment of sacral insufficiency fractures : P219

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_1E6525C6C291
Type
Inproceedings: an article in a conference proceedings.
Publication sub-type
Poster: Summary – with images – on one page of the results of a researche project. The summaries of the poster must be entered in "Abstract" and not "Poster".
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Outcome of long-axis percutaneous sacroplasty as first-line treatment of sacral insufficiency fractures : P219
Title of the conference
SGR-SSR 2009, 96th Annual Swiss Congress of Radiology
Author(s)
Kamel E., Binaghi S., Guntern D PI. , Moushine E., Schnyder P., Theumann N.
Address
Geneva, Switzerland, June 4-6 2009
ISBN
1424-4985
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2009
Volume
9
Series
Swiss Medical Forum = Forum Médical Suisse
Pages
11S
Language
english
Abstract
Purpose: To assess the clinical outcome of patients who were subjected to long-axis sacroplasty as first line treatment for sacral insufficiency fractures. Methods and materials: Nineteen patients with unilateral (n = 3) or bilateral (n = 16) sacral fractures were involved. Under local anaesthesia, each patient was subjected to CT guided sacroplasty using the long-axis approach through a single entry point. An average of 6 ml of PMMA was delivered along the path of each sacral fracture. For each individual patient, the VAS pain score before sacroplasty and at 1, 4, 24, and 48 weeks after the procedure was obtained. Furthermore, the use of analgesics (narcotic/non-narcotic) along with the evolution of post interventional patient mobility before and after sacroplasty was also recorded. Results: The mean pre-procedure VAS score was 8 ± 1.9. This has rapidly declined in the first week after the procedure (mean 4 ± 1.5) followed by gradual decrease along the rest of follow-up period at 4 weeks (mean 3 ± 1.2), 24 weeks (mean 2 ± 1.3), and 48 weeks (mean 1.3 ± 1.4), respectively. Eleven (58%) patients were under narcotic analgesia before sacroplasty, whereas, 8 (42%) patients were using non-narcotics. Corresponding values after the procedure were 2/19 (10%) (narcotic) and 10/19 53% (non-narcotic). Seven (37%) patients did not address post-procedure analgesic use. The evolution of post interventional mobility was favourable in the study group since they revealed a significant improvement in their mobility point scale. Conclusion: Long-axis percutaneous sacroplasty is a suitable minimally invasive treatment option for patients who present with sacral insufficiency fractures. Future studies with larger patient number are warranted to grasp any potential limitations of this therapeutic approach.
Create date
24/06/2009 16:40
Last modification date
20/08/2019 12:54
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