Lumbar Fusion Clinical Trial
Official title:
Clinical and Biomechanics Research in Core Muscles After Lumbar Fusion Surgery
Lumbar fusion has been widely used for spinal disorders when conservative treatment has
failed. However, a number of studies have reported that the rate of re-operation is high for
lumbar fusion surgery. Swelling, atrophy or fat infiltration of the paraspinal muscles at the
surgery site can cause weakness and pain. After fusion, the range of motion is constrained at
the fused spine and might facilitate compensative movement of the adjacent levels and
increase degeneration rate of the spine.
Evidence has shown that core muscles play an important role to stabilize and support the
spine. Whether core stability exercise can enhance spinal stability after lumbar fusion
surgery remains unclear. Therefore, the overall goal of this proposed research is to
investigate how core muscles affect outcomes after lumbar spinal fusion. The investigators
will explore this issue hierarchically and systematically in 3-year duration.
n/a
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