- 著者
-
Koji Tamai
Hidetomi Terai
Akinobu Suzuki
Hiroaki Nakamura
Masaomi Yamashita
Yawara Eguchi
Shiro Imagama
Kei Ando
Kazuyoshi Kobayashi
Morio Matsumoto
Ken Ishii
Tomohiro Hikata
Shoji Seki
Masaaki Aramomi
Tetsuhiro Ishikawa
Atsushi Kimura
Hirokazu Inoue
Gen Inoue
Masayuki Miyagi
Wataru Saito
Kei Yamada
Michio Hongo
Kenji Endo
Hidekazu Suzuki
Atsushi Nakano
Kazuyuki Watanabe
Junichi Ohya
Hirotaka Chikuda
Yasuchika Aoki
Masayuki Shimizu
Toshimasa Futatsugi
Keijiro Mukaiyama
Masaichi Hasegawa
Katsuhito Kiyasu
Haku Iizuka
Kotaro Nishida
Kenichiro Kakutani
Hideaki Nakajima
Hideki Murakami
Satoru Demura
Satoshi Kato
Katsuhito Yoshioka
Takashi Namikawa
Kei Watanabe
Kazuyoshi Nakanishi
Yukihiro Nakagawa
Mitsunori Yoshimoto
Hiroyasu Fujiwara
Norihiro Nishida
Masataka Sakane
Masashi Yamazaki
Takashi Kaito
Takeo Furuya
Sumihisa Orita
Seiji Ohtori
- 出版者
- The Japanese Society for Spine Surgery and Related Research
- 雑誌
- Spine Surgery and Related Research (ISSN:2432261X)
- 巻号頁・発行日
- vol.1, no.4, pp.179-184, 2017-10-20 (Released:2017-11-27)
- 参考文献数
- 26
- 被引用文献数
-
3
3
Introduction: With an aging population, the proportion of patients aged ≥80 years requiring cervical surgery is increasing. Surgeons are concerned with the high incidence of complications in this population, because "age" itself has been reported as a strong risk factor for complications. However, it is still unknown which factors represent higher risk among these elderly patients. Therefore, this study was conducted to identify the risk factors related to surgical complications specific to elderly patients by analyzing the registry data of patients aged ≥80 years who underwent cervical surgery.Methods: We retrospectively studied multicenter collected registry data using multivariate analysis. Sixty-six patients aged ≥80 years who underwent cervical surgery and were followed up for more than one year were included in this study. Preoperative patient demographic data, including comorbidities and postoperative complications, were collected from multicenter registry data. Complications were considered as major if they required invasive intervention, caused prolonged morbidity, or resulted in prolongation of hospital stay. Logistic regression analysis was performed to analyze the risk factors for complications. A p-value of <0.05 was considered as statistically significant.Results: The total number of patients with complications was 21 (31.8%), with seven major (10.6%) and 14 minor (21.2%) complications. Multivariate logistic regression analysis, after adjusting for age, revealed two significant risk factors: preoperative cerebrovascular disorders (OR, 6.337; p=0.043) for overall complications and cancer history (OR, 8.168; p=0.021) for major complications. Age, presence of diabetes mellitus, and diagnosis were not significant predictive factors for complications in this study.Conclusions: Preoperative cerebrovascular disorders and cancer history were risk factors for complications after cervical surgery in patients over 80 years old. Surgeons should pay attention to these specific risk factors before performing cervical surgery in elderly patients.