There is a low incidence of reoperation after surgery. It is difficult to detect statistical differences between reoperation rates of different lumbar fusion surgeries. National population-based databases provide large, longitudinally followed cohorts that may help overcome this challenge. The purpose is to compare the repeat decompression and fusion rate after surgery for degenerative lumbar diseases according to different surgical fusion procedures based on national population-based databases and elucidate the risk factor for repeat decompression and fusions. The Korean Health Insurance Review & Assessment Service database was used. Patients diagnosed with degenerative lumbar diseases and who underwent single-level fusion surgeries betwee...
STUDY DESIGN Retrospective single-center cohort study. OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was ...
Study DesignEighty-four patients who had been treated for degenerative spinal diseases between Janua...
Lumbar degenerative disc disease is extremely common. Current evidence supports surgery in carefully...
Objective: The reoperation rate after lumbar degenerative disease surgery is low. It is difficult to...
Background: Reoperation is one of the key factors affecting postoperative clinical outcomes. The reo...
Study Design. A prospective cohort study. Objective. This study evaluated the cumulative reoperatio...
Background and Study Aim Reoperation for lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) is technically challenging. St...
Importance: Only limited data derived from large prospective cohort studies exist on the incidence o...
STUDY DESIGN: National population-based cohort study. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate reoperation rates of c...
Study DesignRetrospective study.PurposeTo study the surgical outcome of transforaminal lumbar interb...
Background and purpose — There are different opinions on how to surgically address lumbar spinal ste...
BackgroundFor the surgical treatment of single-level degenerative spondylolisthesis (DS), patients c...
Background: Spinal fusion in the form of transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion (TLIF) and posterior...
Background: Degenerative lumbar canal stenosis remains an important public health problem in today’s...
Study DesignRetrospective review of prospective registry data.PurposeTo determine 5-year clinical an...
STUDY DESIGN Retrospective single-center cohort study. OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was ...
Study DesignEighty-four patients who had been treated for degenerative spinal diseases between Janua...
Lumbar degenerative disc disease is extremely common. Current evidence supports surgery in carefully...
Objective: The reoperation rate after lumbar degenerative disease surgery is low. It is difficult to...
Background: Reoperation is one of the key factors affecting postoperative clinical outcomes. The reo...
Study Design. A prospective cohort study. Objective. This study evaluated the cumulative reoperatio...
Background and Study Aim Reoperation for lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) is technically challenging. St...
Importance: Only limited data derived from large prospective cohort studies exist on the incidence o...
STUDY DESIGN: National population-based cohort study. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate reoperation rates of c...
Study DesignRetrospective study.PurposeTo study the surgical outcome of transforaminal lumbar interb...
Background and purpose — There are different opinions on how to surgically address lumbar spinal ste...
BackgroundFor the surgical treatment of single-level degenerative spondylolisthesis (DS), patients c...
Background: Spinal fusion in the form of transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion (TLIF) and posterior...
Background: Degenerative lumbar canal stenosis remains an important public health problem in today’s...
Study DesignRetrospective review of prospective registry data.PurposeTo determine 5-year clinical an...
STUDY DESIGN Retrospective single-center cohort study. OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was ...
Study DesignEighty-four patients who had been treated for degenerative spinal diseases between Janua...
Lumbar degenerative disc disease is extremely common. Current evidence supports surgery in carefully...