# Minimally Invasive Trans-sacral Canal Plasty for Lumbar Canal Stenosis

**Authors:** Seiya Watanabe, Kazuo Nakanishi, Ryo Sato, Yoshihisa Sugimoto, Shigeru Mitani

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.59509 · Cureus · 2024-05-02

## TL;DR

This paper reports on a minimally invasive surgery for lumbar canal stenosis, showing pain improvement but a high rate of additional surgeries.

## Contribution

Presents initial clinical outcomes of trans-sacral canal plasty for elderly patients with lumbar canal stenosis.

## Key findings

- Average back and leg pain scores improved immediately after TSCP.
- 31% of patients required additional surgery within two years.
- Smaller spinal canal area was linked to the need for additional surgery.

## Abstract

Objective

The elderly population is increasing in Japan. Along with the increase in the elderly population, the number of patients with lumbar degenerative diseases is also on the rise. In general, elderly patients tend to have more complications and are at higher risk for surgery. Many elderly people suffer from lumbar degenerative disease. We reviewed our initial experience with trans-sacral canal plasty (TSCP) for patients with lumbar spinal canal stenosis and examined the pertinent literature for this report.

Methods

An analytical observational study was performed on 120 patients with lumbar spinal canal stenosis who underwent TSCP at our single institution from March 2019 to October 2021. These patients had leg pain and/or lower back pain due to degenerative lumbar disease. Patients who had coagulation abnormality, pregnancy, contrast allergy, pyogenic spondylitis, or spinal metastasis were excluded.

Results

Immediately after TSCP, the average Visual Analog Scale (VAS) score for back pain improved from 58.2 to 29.3, and for leg pain from 72.0 to 31.3. Two years after TSCP, the average VAS score for back pain increased slightly and the average score for leg pain remained almost the same. Additional surgery was performed in 37 of 120 (31%) patients who underwent TSCP. The additional surgery group had significantly worse back pain at one and three months postoperatively than the conservative treatment group. The additional surgery group had significantly worse leg pain immediately after TSCP and at one and three months postoperatively than the conservative treatment group. Logistic regression analysis demonstrated that a decreased spinal canal area (OR 0.986, p = 0.039) was associated with additional surgery.

Conclusions

We reviewed the outcomes of TSCP at our hospital. The average VAS score for back pain and leg pain improved. However, 31% of patients who underwent TSCP required additional surgery. It was found that the spinal canal area was a major factor in the need for additional surgery.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** coagulation abnormality (MESH:D001778), Lumbar Canal Stenosis (MESH:C563613), back pain (MESH:D001416), pyogenic spondylitis (MESH:D013166), degenerative lumbar disease (MESH:D019636), lower back pain (MESH:D017116), spinal metastasis (MESH:D009362), contrast allergy (MESH:D005119), leg pain (MESH:D010146)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

20 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11145928/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11145928