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The acute osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture. Its natural course and characteristics.

Abstract
Aim: The overall aim of this thesis was to investigate the natural course and the characteristics of the acute osteoporotic vertebral compression fracture in order to better understand and improve treatment for this type of fracture. Patients and methods: Eligible patients were all patients over 40 years of age who sought medical care at the emergency unit at Sahlgrenska University Hospital (studies I-III) or referred to the X-ray Department at Capio Diagnostic Center (study IV) because of back pain with a radiographically-confirmed acute vertebral body fracture which resulted from a low energy trauma. In studies I-III, a total of 107 patients were followed over one year using postal questionnaires. In study IV, a total of 448 patients were included. The pain, disability, ADL, and QoL were measured after 3 weeks, and 3, 6 and 12 months (studies I-III). The patient and fracture characteristics on the first X-ray visit were evaluated in all the studies. Results: Studies I-III. For all the outcome measures, the largest improvements, 10-15%, occurred between 3 weeks and 3 months. Thereafter, all the outcome measures levelled off or even worsened. One year after the fracture event, the patients’ conditions were poor: 60.5 for the pain intensity score, 53.9 for the disability score, 47.6 for the ADL score, and 0.52 for EQ-5D. These average values are similar to values seen preoperatively in patients with a herniated lumbar disc disease or in patients who are 100% disabled from work due to back or neck problems. The most influential factors were the initial fracture deformation severity and the number of previous fractures, whereas fracture level, fracture type, and gender influenced to a lesser extent. Study IV. The acute fracture characteristics were similar to those found in previous population-based studies of incident and prevalent fractures and in studies I-III. In the prevalent fracture analysis, concave fractures were frequent below L2 whereas wedge fractures were more frequent above L2. Mildly deformed fractures increased in the caudal direction and moderately deformed fractures increased in the cranial direction. Severely deformed fractures were frequent in the mid-thoracic spine and at the thoracolumbar junction. Conclusions: One year after the acute fracture, it was striking to find that 76% of the patients still had a high pain intensity and the mean QoL score was 35% lower than the population value for the same age group. This finding is quite different from the generally believed good prognosis for such a fracture. There is potential for better treatment. The relationship between the poor outcomes and the initial facture deformation severity specifically suggests the indication for invasive treatment, such as vertebroplasty or kyphoplasty.
Parts of work
I. The course of the acute vertebral body fragility fracture: its effect on pain, disability and quality of life during 12 months. Suzuki N, Ogikubo O, Hansson T. (2008) Eur Spine J 17(10): 1380-90::pmid::18751742
 
II. The prognosis for pain, disability, activities of daily living and quality of life after an acute osteoporotic vertebral body fracture: Its relation to fracture level, type of fracture and grade of fracture deformation. Suzuki N, Ogikubo O, Hansson T. (2009) Eur Spine J 18(1): 77-88::pmid::19082846
 
III. Previous vertebral compression fractures add to the deterioration of disability and quality of life after an acute compression fracture. Suzuki N, Ogikubo O, Hansson T. Eur Spine J (submitted)
 
IV. The characteristics of the acute and prevalent osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures. Suzuki N, Hansson T. Eur Spine J (submitted)
 
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Medicine)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Clincial Sciences. Department of Orthopaedics
Disputation
Fredagen den 13 mars 2009, kl. 9.00, i Förmaket, Sahlgrenska universitetssjukhuset/Sahlgrenska, Göteborg
Date of defence
2009-03-13
E-mail
nobmayu@mac.com
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/19050
Collections
  • Doctoral Theses / Doktorsavhandlingar Institutionen för kliniska vetenskaper
  • Doctoral Theses from Sahlgrenska Academy
  • Doctoral Theses from University of Gothenburg / Doktorsavhandlingar från Göteborgs universitet
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Thesis frame (949.6Kb)
Abstract (168.4Kb)
Date
2009-02-21
Author
Suzuki, Nobuyuki
Keywords
Vertebral body fracture
Osteoporosis
Pain
Quality of life
Disability
Compression fracture
Prognosis
Treatment
Prevalent fracture
Epidemiology
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-7715-6
Language
eng
Metadata
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