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Minimally Invasive Spinal Treatment (MIST)-A New Concept in the Treatment of Spinal Diseases: A Narrative Review

発表形態:
総説
主要業績:
主要業績
単著・共著:
共著
発表年月:
2022年08月
DOI:
10.3390/medicina58081123
会議属性:
指定なし
査読:
有り
リンク情報:

日本語フィールド

著者:
*Ken Ishii, Goichi Watanabe, Takashi Tomita, Takuya Nikaido, Tomohiro Hikata, Akira Shinohara, Masato Nakano, Takanori Saito, Kazuo Nakanishi, Tadatsugu Morimoto, Norihiro Isogai, Haruki Funao, Masato Tanaka, Yoshihisa Kotani, Takeshi Arizono, Masahiro Hoshino, Koji Sato
題名:
Minimally Invasive Spinal Treatment (MIST)-A New Concept in the Treatment of Spinal Diseases: A Narrative Review
発表情報:
Medicina (Kaunas) 巻: 58 号: 8 ページ: 1123
キーワード:
conservative treatment; minimally invasive spinal treatment (MIST); minimally invasive spine stabilization (MISt); minimally invasive spine surgery (MISS); percutaneous pedicle screws (PPS); preventive medicine; rehabilitation; spinal instrumentation
概要:
In the past two decades, minimally invasive spine surgery (MISS) techniques have been developed for spinal surgery. Historically, minimizing invasiveness in decompression surgery was initially reported as a MISS technique. In recent years, MISS techniques have also been applied for spinal stabilization techniques, which were defined as minimally invasive spine stabilization (MISt), including percutaneous pedicle screws (PPS) fixation, lateral lumbar interbody fusion, balloon kyphoplasty, percutaneous vertebroplasty, cortical bone trajectory, and cervical total disc replacement. These MISS techniques typically provide many advantages such as preservation of paraspinal musculature, less blood loss, a shorter operative time, less postoperative pain, and a lower infection rate as well as being more cost-effective compared to traditional open techniques. However, even MISS techniques are associated with several limitations including technical difficulty, training opportunities, surgical cost, equipment cost, and radiation exposure. These downsides of surgical treatments make conservative treatments more feasible option. In the future, medicine must become "minimally invasive" in the broadest sense-for all patients, conventional surgeries, medical personnel, hospital management, nursing care, and the medical economy. As a new framework for the treatment of spinal diseases, the concept of minimally invasive spinal treatment (MIST) has been proposed.
抄録:

英語フィールド

Author:
*Ken Ishii, Goichi Watanabe, Takashi Tomita, Takuya Nikaido, Tomohiro Hikata, Akira Shinohara, Masato Nakano, Takanori Saito, Kazuo Nakanishi, Tadatsugu Morimoto, Norihiro Isogai, Haruki Funao, Masato Tanaka, Yoshihisa Kotani, Takeshi Arizono, Masahiro Hoshino, Koji Sato
Title:
Minimally Invasive Spinal Treatment (MIST)-A New Concept in the Treatment of Spinal Diseases: A Narrative Review
Announcement information:
Medicina (Kaunas) Vol: 58 Issue: 8 Page: 1123
Keyword:
conservative treatment; minimally invasive spinal treatment (MIST); minimally invasive spine stabilization (MISt); minimally invasive spine surgery (MISS); percutaneous pedicle screws (PPS); preventive medicine; rehabilitation; spinal instrumentation
An abstract:
In the past two decades, minimally invasive spine surgery (MISS) techniques have been developed for spinal surgery. Historically, minimizing invasiveness in decompression surgery was initially reported as a MISS technique. In recent years, MISS techniques have also been applied for spinal stabilization techniques, which were defined as minimally invasive spine stabilization (MISt), including percutaneous pedicle screws (PPS) fixation, lateral lumbar interbody fusion, balloon kyphoplasty, percutaneous vertebroplasty, cortical bone trajectory, and cervical total disc replacement. These MISS techniques typically provide many advantages such as preservation of paraspinal musculature, less blood loss, a shorter operative time, less postoperative pain, and a lower infection rate as well as being more cost-effective compared to traditional open techniques. However, even MISS techniques are associated with several limitations including technical difficulty, training opportunities, surgical cost, equipment cost, and radiation exposure. These downsides of surgical treatments make conservative treatments more feasible option. In the future, medicine must become "minimally invasive" in the broadest sense-for all patients, conventional surgeries, medical personnel, hospital management, nursing care, and the medical economy. As a new framework for the treatment of spinal diseases, the concept of minimally invasive spinal treatment (MIST) has been proposed.


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