Relationship between posterior paraspinal muscle fat infiltration and early conversion to lumbar spinal fusion following decompression surgery. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • PURPOSE: Spinal stenosis, a common degenerative condition causing back pain and neurogenic claudication, often requires decompression surgery when conservative treatments fail. This study investigates the relationship between posterior paraspinal muscle (PPM) measurements and early conversion to lumbar fusion in patients following decompression surgery. Understanding this relationship is crucial, as prior research suggests paraspinal fat infiltration impacts spinal alignment and surgical outcomes, potentially necessitating revision lumbar fusion surgery. METHODS: An institutional database of posterior lumbar fusion patients was reviewed, excluding those with prior fusion history and missing pre-decompression MRIs. Conversions within two years post-decompression were "early conversion," those between 2 and 5 years "intermediate conversion," and those 5 years or later "late conversion." Muscle segmentations were performed using ITK-SNAP, with ROI set in the bilateral psoas muscle and PPM on preoperative T2-weighted axial MRI at the superior endplate of L4. Muscle metrics were calculated using Matlabâ„¢, and sagittal alignment was assessed on sagittal standing spinal radiographs. RESULTS: The final analysis included 50 patients, with early conversion to fusion observed in 21 patients (42%), intermediate in 14 patients (28%), and late in 15 patients (30%). Patients with early conversion showed significantly higher total PPM FI compared to those with late conversion (p = 0.03). No differences were noted in sagittal alignment measurements among groups. CONCLUSION: Higher PPM FI may estimate early conversion to lumbar fusion post-decompression surgery, emphasizing the importance of muscle health in surgical planning and patient management for spinal stenosis. Further research is needed to refine risk stratification and optimize treatment strategies.

publication date

  • June 13, 2025

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1007/s00586-025-09030-5

PubMed ID

  • 40514565