Spondylolysis Clinical Trial
Lumbar spondylolysis is a relatively common condition that causes severe and perennial back
pain in young populations. Conservative treatment of this condition may be futile, and may
eventually require surgical treatment such as direct repair of pars defect and a segmental
lumbar fusion with an anterior or posterior approach. Recently, of surgical treatment
methods for spondylolysis, direct repair surgery of pars defect has been focused due to its
inherited strengths. Most importantly, fusion surgery caused the affected segment to lose
the nature range of motion and furthermore adjacent segment to be adversely affecting such
as adjacent disc disease or degeneration, while direct repair theoretically could preserve
the motion of the affected segment, which do not cause the adjacent segment problems as
being the fusion surgery, as well as could produce better surgical outcomes with relatively
less invasive technique as compared to fusion surgery. Moreover, previous articles have
demonstrated that the direct repair surgery for spondylolysis of lumbar spine could achieve
great functional and radiological outcomes. However, most of the previous studies was
conducted using lower level designed study such as retrospective and small sample size,
thereby prior literature does not provide clear information on the therapeutic outcome of
direct repair for lumbar spondylolysis, especially for managing spondylolysis of young
population.
Therefore, The investigators aimed to evaluate and determine the outcomes of direct repair
surgery for lumbar spondylolysis in young population. To our knowledge, this is the first
report that describes the functional and radiological outcomes of direct repair for
spondylolysis in young populations with prospective cohort study design and relatively large
sample size.
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Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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