학술논문

Sacroiliac Joint Pain Should Be Suspected in Early Buttock and Groin Pain after Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery: An Observational Study
Document Type
article
Source
Spine Surgery and Related Research, Vol 6, Iss 5, Pp 472-479 (2022)
Subject
adult spinal deformity
sacroiliac joint pain
s2 alar-iliac screws
ultrasonography
sacroiliac joint block
ultrasound-guided sacroiliac joint block
physical therapy
Surgery
RD1-811
Language
English
ISSN
2432-261X
Abstract
Introduction: Sacroiliac joint pain (SIJP) is one of the pathological conditions of adjacent segment disorders occurring after adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery. This study aimed to test the hypothesis that even in ASD surgery using S2 alar-iliac (S2AI) screws, SIJP can develop much earlier than reported previously and can be rescued by ultrasound-guided sacroiliac joint block. Methods: Overall, 94 patients with ASD treated with long spinal fusion using S2AI screws were prospectively investigated for SIJP postoperatively, and the effect of ultrasound-guided sacroiliac joint block was evaluated. Additionally, the relationship between the symptomatic side of the SIJP and the surgical procedure; the preoperative and postoperative whole-spine sagittal and coronal alignment, lumbar pelvis sagittal plane alignment, and pelvic incidence-lumbar lordosis were retrospectively compared between the groups with and without SIJP. Results: Eleven of 94 cases (11.7%) developed SIJP. The average onset was 12.0 (±6.2) days after surgery. The “one-finger test,”“Gaenslen test,” and “tenderness of the posterosuperior iliac spine” had high positivity rates for SIJP. Night pain occurred in 81.8% of patients and was one of the diagnostic features. There were no significant relationships between the symptomatic side of SIJP and the approach-side of lumbar interbody fusion, donor site of the iliac bone graft, or malposition of the S2AI screw. There were no significant differences in preoperative characteristics and radiological parameters between the SIJP-positive and -negative groups preoperatively, postoperatively, or in postoperative changes. Two of the 11 cases required the SIJ block four times, but all patients eventually achieved >70% pain relief with no recurrence. Conclusions: For good pain control and physical therapy, the fact that early buttock-groin pain after spinal fusion surgery has a 12% likelihood of being due to SIJP and can be relieved with the ultrasound-guided SIJ block is clinically important for diagnosis and pain management.