Interplay of Anatomy and Surgical Approach: A Comparative Review of Neurovascular Risk in Lateral and Oblique Lumbar Interbody Fusion
Ali Hamide, Maryam Babar, Aymen Arain, Masab A Mansoor, Jordan Bendavid, Razi Rashid

TL;DR
This paper compares the neurovascular risks of two minimally invasive spinal surgery approaches, LLIF and OLIF, highlighting anatomical challenges and strategies to reduce complications.
Contribution
The paper provides a comparative review of anatomical and neurovascular risks specific to LLIF and OLIF surgical approaches.
Findings
LLIF and OLIF approaches minimize muscle damage but pose risks due to proximity to lumbar plexus and vascular structures.
Anatomical variability increases the complexity of LLIF and OLIF, requiring detailed preoperative planning.
Mitigation strategies include precise navigation and intraoperative vigilance to avoid iatrogenic injury.
Abstract
Degenerative conditions of the lumbar spine, such as disc herniation, spinal stenosis, and degenerative spondylolisthesis, represent a significant global health burden, frequently leading to chronic pain, neurological deficits, and diminished quality of life. Traditional open surgical approaches for lumbar interbody fusion, while effective, often involve extensive soft tissue dissection, which can lead to considerable blood loss, prolonged recovery times, and muscle damage. In response to these challenges, minimally invasive surgical (MIS) techniques have rapidly evolved, aiming to achieve comparable clinical outcomes with reduced iatrogenic tissue injury. Among the prominent MIS strategies for lumbar interbody fusion, two approaches have gained significant traction: lateral lumbar interbody fusion (LLIF), which encompasses techniques such as the direct lateral transpsoas interbody…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpine and Intervertebral Disc Pathology · Cervical and Thoracic Myelopathy · Anesthesia and Pain Management
