# Postoperative Recovery of Balance Function in Lumbar Spinal Stenosis: A 12-Month Longitudinal Study Using the Brief BESTest and Its Association with Patient-Reported Outcomes

**Authors:** Tomoyoshi Sakaguchi, Masato Tanaka, Shinya Arataki, Tadashi Komatsubara, Akiyoshi Miyamoto, Mandar Borde, Umarani Arvind, Kazuhiko Takamatsu, Yosuke Yasuda, Adrian Doană-Prodan, Kaoruko Ishihara

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm14155520 · 2025-08-05

## TL;DR

This study tracks balance recovery in LSS patients over 12 months post-surgery and finds improvements linked to reduced pain and disability.

## Contribution

A longitudinal assessment of balance function recovery using the Brief BESTest and its association with patient-reported outcomes in LSS patients.

## Key findings

- Balance function improved significantly post-surgery and remained stable for 12 months.
- Brief BESTest scores correlated with reduced disability, pain, and fear of falling at 12 months.
- Subdomains like Anticipatory Adjustments and Postural Responses showed significant improvement.

## Abstract

Study Design: Prospective observational study. Background: Lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) impairs balance and gait function, increasing fall risk and limiting quality of life. Although postoperative recovery of balance is clinically important, longitudinal data using multidimensional balance assessments are limited. Methods: A prospective cohort study was conducted in 101 patients (mean age 74.9 ± 6.9 years) undergoing surgery for LSS. The Brief Balance Evaluation Systems Test (Brief BESTest), Oswestry Disability Index (ODI), Modified Falls Efficacy Scale (MFES), Zurich Claudication Questionnaire (ZCQ), and Visual Analog Scales (VAS) for pain/numbness were evaluated preoperatively and at 6 and 12 months postoperatively. Changes over time and correlations between Brief BESTest and PROMs were analyzed. Results: The total Brief BESTest score significantly improved from 13.3 ± 5.3 preoperatively to 16.1 ± 5.1 at 6 months and 16.0 ± 5.1 at 12 months (p < 0.01). Subdomains including Anticipatory Adjustments, Postural Responses, Sensory Orientation, and Stability in Gait improved significantly, while Stability Limits did not. At 12 months postoperatively, ODI decreased by 19.1%, ZCQ symptom and function scores improved by 0.8 and 0.9 points, respectively, and VAS scores improved by 17.1 mm for low back pain, 26.5 mm for lower limb pain, and 19.5 mm for numbness, all showing marked improvements from baseline. MFES also increased significantly postoperatively. The Brief BESTest score correlated significantly with MFES and ZCQ-PFS at baseline, and with ODI, ZCQ, and VAS scores at 12 months. Conclusions: Balance ability in LSS patients improved after surgery, as measured by the Brief BESTest, with clinically meaningful changes maintained for 12 months. Improvements in balance were significantly associated with reductions in pain, disability, and fear of falling, suggesting the Brief BESTest is a comprehensive indicator of postoperative recovery.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Lumbar spinal stenosis (MONDO:0005965)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** fear of falling (MESH:C000719212), numbness (MESH:D006987), LSS (MESH:C563613), low back pain (MESH:D017116), pain (MESH:D010146)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12347744/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12347744