Infection and revision strategies in total disc arthroplasty. (25/57)

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Clinical, radiological, histological and retrieval findings of Activ-L and Mobidisc total disc replacements: a study of two patients. (26/57)

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Sagittal endplate morphology of the lower lumbar spine. (27/57)

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Sagittal alignment and kinematics at instrumented and adjacent levels after total disc replacement in the cervical spine. (28/57)

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In vitro and in silico investigations of disc nucleus replacement. (29/57)

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An in vitro biomechanical comparison of Cadisc-L with natural lumbar discs in axial compression and sagittal flexion. (30/57)

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The use of self-mating PEEK as an alternative bearing material for cervical disc arthroplasty: a comparison of different simulator inputs and tribological environments. (31/57)

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Comparative effectiveness research across two spine registries. (32/57)

BACKGROUND: Comparative effectiveness research in spine surgery is still a rarity. In this study, pain alleviation and quality of life (QoL) improvement after lumbar total disc arthroplasty (TDA) and anterior lumbar interbody fusion (ALIF) were anonymously compared by surgeon and implant. METHODS: A total of 534 monosegmental TDAs from the SWISSspine registry were analyzed. Mean age was 42 years (19-65 years), 59% were females. Fifty cases with ALIF were documented in the international Spine Tango registry and used as concurrent comparator group for the pain analysis. Mean age was 46 years (21-69 years), 78% were females. The average follow-up time in both samples was 1 year. Comparison of back/leg pain alleviation and QoL improvement was performed. Unadjusted and adjusted probabilities for achievement of minimum clinically relevant improvements of 18 VAS points or 0.25 EQ-5D points were calculated for each surgeon. RESULTS: Mean preoperative back pain decreased from 69 to 30 points at 1 year (ODelta 39pts) after TDA, and from 66 to 27 points after ALIF (ODelta 39pts). Mean preoperative QoL improved from 0.34 to 0.74 points at 1 year (ODelta 0.40pts). There were surgeons with better patient selection, indicated by lower adjusted probabilities reflecting worsening of outcomes if they had treated an average patient sample. ALIF had similar pain alleviation than TDA. CONCLUSIONS: Pain alleviation after TDA and ALIF was similar. Differences in surgeon's patient selection based on pain and QoL were revealed. Some surgeons seem to miss the full therapeutic potential of TDA by selecting patients with lower symptom severity.  (+info)