학술논문

Effectiveness of Repair Techniques for Spinal Dural Tears: A Systematic Review.
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Spine
Dura Mater
Humans
Spinal Diseases
Postoperative Complications
Tissue Adhesives
Treatment Outcome
Neurosurgical Procedures
Reoperation
Tissue Transplantation
Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak
Dural repair
Durotomy
Neurosurgery
Primary closure
Sealants
Spine surgery
Neurosciences
Clinical Sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundIncidental or intentional durotomy in spine surgery is associated with a risk of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage and reoperation. Several strategies have been introduced, but the incomplete closure is still relatively frequent and troublesome. In this study, we review current evidence on spinal dural repair strategies and evaluate their efficacy.MethodsPubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus were used to search primary studies about the repair of the spinal dura with different techniques. Of 265 articles found, 11 studies, which specified repair techniques and postoperative outcomes, were included for qualitative and quantitative analysis. The primary outcomes were CSF leakage and postoperative infection.ResultsThe outcomes of different dural repair techniques were available in 776 cases. Pooled analysis of 11 studies demonstrated that the most commonly used technique was a combination of primary closure, patch or graft, and sealant (22.7%, 176/776). A combination of primary closure and patch or graft resulted in the lowest rate of CSF leakage (5.5%, 7/128). In this study, sealants as an adjunct to primary closure (13.7%, 18/131) did not significantly reduce the rate of CSF leakage compared with primary closure alone (17.6%, 18/102). The rates of infection and postoperative neurologic deficit were similar regardless of the repair techniques.ConclusionsAlthough the use of sealants has become prevalent, available sealants as an adjunct to primary closure did not reduce the rate of CSF leakage compared with primary closure. The combination of primary closure and patches or grafts could be effective in decreasing postoperative CSF leakage.