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Spine 2018-Oct

Closed Wound Sub-Fascial Suction Drainage in Posterior Fusion Surgery for Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis: A Prospective Randomize Control study.

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Dror Ovadia
Michael Drexler
Moti Kramer
Amir Herman
David Lebel

Keywords

Abstract

METHODS

Prospective randomized control study.

OBJECTIVE

To compare the complication rate in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) posterior spinal fusion (PSF) surgery with and without drainage.

BACKGROUND

PSF is the mainstay of surgical treatment for AIS. Drains are commonly used despite contradictory findings in the literature for their having any clear advantage.

METHODS

A total of 100 AIS patients undergoing instrumented PSF were blindly randomized into 2 groups of either a deep drain or no drain. The collected data included wound follow-up findings, hemoglobin, hematocrit, vital signs and fever levels, and mean 20 months follow-up.

RESULTS

Fifty-two patients were randomly allocated to the "no drain" group and 48 to the "drain" group. There were no differences in patient characteristics, surgical data and hemoglobin and hematocrit levels between the 2 groups. Only 4 units of packed cells were given in total. Fever during the first postoperative 1-3 days was equal, but increased in the no drain group on day 6 (P = 0.017). Length of hospitalization was equal (6 days) for all the patients. The mean follow-up period was 20 months [8.5-30.7 (SD 6.4)]. Complications included one case (1.9%) of pneumonia in the "no-drain" group, wound dehiscence in 2 cases (3.8%) in the "no-drain" group and in one case (2.1%) in the "drain" group, and 2 cases (3.8%) of superficial wound infection in the "no-drain" group. There was no case of deep infection in either group.

CONCLUSIONS

The current results indicate that there is no advantage to deep drainage in AIS patients undergoing PSF. The number of wound healing complications was low and identical for both the drain and no-drain groups.

METHODS

2.

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