Artigo Produção Nacional Revisado por pares

The Effect of Patient Position on Psoas Morphology and in Lumbar Lordosis

2021; Elsevier BV; Volume: 153; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.wneu.2021.06.067

ISSN

1878-8769

Autores

Rodrigo Amaral, Murilo Tavares Daher, Raphael de Rezende Pratali, Daniel Arnoni, Gabriel Pokorny, Raquel Rodrigues, Matheus Batista, Pedro Paulo Souza Fortuna, Luiz Pimenta, Carlos Fernando Pereira da Silva Herrero,

Tópico(s)

Musculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation

Resumo

Among the interbody fusions, lateral lumbar interbody fusion allows access to the lumbar spine through the major psoas muscle, which offers several advantages to the spine surgeon. However, some of its drawbacks cause surgeons to avoid using it as a daily practice. Therefore, to address some of these challenges, we propose the prone transpsoas technique, differing mainly from the traditional technique on patient position-moving from lateral to prone decubitus, theoretically enhancing the lordosis and impacting the psoas morphology.Twenty-four consecutive patients were invited to have magnetic resonance imaging examinations in 3 different positions (prone, dorsal, lateral). Two observers measured the following parameters: vertebral body size, psoas diameter, psoas anterior border distance, plexus distance, total lumbar lordosis, distal lumbar lordosis, and proximal lumbar lordosis. Values of P < 0.05 were deemed significant.The prone position yielded a significant increase in the lumbar lordosis, both in L1-S1 (57° vs. 46.5°) and proximal lordosis (40.4° vs. 36.9°) compared with the lateral position. Regarding the morphologic aspects, patients in the prone position presented lesser psoas muscles forward shift, but no difference was noted in the plexus position neither for L3-L4 nor L4-L5.The prone position resulted in a significantly increased lumbar lordosis, both distal and proximal, which may enable the spine surgeon to achieve significant sagittal restoration just by positioning. The prone position also produced a posterior retraction of the psoas muscle. However, it did not significantly affect the position of the plexus concerning the vertebral body.

Referência(s)
Altmetric
PlumX