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Bariatric surgery diminishes spinal diagnoses in a morbidly obese population: A 2-year survivorship analysis of cervical and lumbar pathologies
•After weight-loss surgery, patients no longer sought care for their spinal diagnosis•Lumbar herniation had higher resolution than cervical herniation by 90 days.•Cervical degeneration and stenosis resolved at higher rates than lumbar pathologies. The effects of bariatric surgery on diminishing spin...
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Published in: | Journal of clinical neuroscience 2021-08, Vol.90, p.135-139 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
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Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | •After weight-loss surgery, patients no longer sought care for their spinal diagnosis•Lumbar herniation had higher resolution than cervical herniation by 90 days.•Cervical degeneration and stenosis resolved at higher rates than lumbar pathologies.
The effects of bariatric surgery on diminishing spinal diagnoses have yet to be elucidated in the literature. The purpose of this study was to assess the rate in which various spinal diagnoses diminish after bariatric surgery. This was a retrospective analysis of the NYSID years 2004–2013. Patient linkage codes allow identification of multiple and return inpatient stays within the time-frame analyzed (720 days). Time from bariatric surgery until the patient’s respective spinal diagnosis was no longer present was considered a loss of previous spinal diagnosis (LOD). Included: 4,351 bariatric surgery pts with a pre-op spinal diagnosis. Cumulative LOD rates at 90-day, 180-day, 360-day, and 720-day f/u were as follows: lumbar stenosis (48%,67.6%,79%,91%), lumbar herniation (61%,77%,86%,93%), lumbar spondylosis (47%,65%,80%,93%), lumbar spondylolisthesis (37%,58%,70%,87%), lumbar degeneration (37%,56%,72%,86%). By cervical region: cervical stenosis (48%,70%,84%,94%), cervical herniation (39%,58%,74%,87%), cervical spondylosis (46%, 70%,83%, 94%), cervical degeneration (44%,64%,78%,89%). Lumbar herniation pts saw significantly higher 90d-LOD than cervical herniation pts (p |
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ISSN: | 0967-5868 1532-2653 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jocn.2021.05.012 |