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Identification and Management of Neurologic Complications in Patients Undergoing Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Nielsen, CJ; Smith, JS; Martin, AR; Rocos, B; Jentzsch, T; Ravinsky, RA; Oitment, C; Pahuta, M; Kato, S; Lewis, SJ; AO Spine Knowledge Forum Deformity
Published in: Global Spine J
July 2025

Study DesignNarrative Literature Review.ObjectiveTo provide a comprehensive literature review of neurologic complications in Adult Spinal Deformity (ASD) surgery in the pre-operative, peri-operative and post-operative periods.MethodsA broad review of the literature was conducted using the multiple databases including Pubmed, Embase, Scopus and the Cochrane library. Individual studies of relevance were appraised and included at the discretion of the authors on the basis of pertinence, impact on practice and scientific merit.ResultsThe evidence regarding epidemiology, classification of complications, pre-operative evaluation of patients, peri-operative strategies to mitigate risk, intra-operative management of neuromonitoring changes and post-operative management of neurologic injury was critically appraised. Patients with the highest risk of neurologic complication include those with pre-surgery neuroaxis abnormality, high Deformity Angular Ratio, 3 column osteotomies and increased blood loss. Accurate and timely identification of intraoperative neuromonitoring changes is critical to ensuring appropriate response depending on whether changes are perfusion based (maintain adequate MAP and Hb, reverse corrective maneuvers) or traumatic (decompression of neural elements, assessment of instrumentation, reversal of corrective maneuvers, steroids). Surgical checklists can help surgeons navigate these stressful events to ensure appropriate steps and interventions are taken.ConclusionNeurological injuries occurring during the course of ASD surgery are potentially devastating complication, with regards to both patient morbidity and economic impact. Pre-operative identification of high risk patients, perioperative strategies to improve safety, timely recognition and management of intra-operative neuromonitoring changes and post-operative supportive measures can potentially reduce the incidence and significance of neurological injuries.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Global Spine J

DOI

ISSN

2192-5682

Publication Date

July 2025

Volume

15

Issue

3_suppl

Start / End Page

135S / 147S

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • 3202 Clinical sciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Nielsen, C. J., Smith, J. S., Martin, A. R., Rocos, B., Jentzsch, T., Ravinsky, R. A., … AO Spine Knowledge Forum Deformity. (2025). Identification and Management of Neurologic Complications in Patients Undergoing Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery. Global Spine J, 15(3_suppl), 135S-147S. https://doi.org/10.1177/21925682241264221
Nielsen, Christopher J., Justin S. Smith, Allan R. Martin, Brett Rocos, Thorsten Jentzsch, Robert A. Ravinsky, Colby Oitment, et al. “Identification and Management of Neurologic Complications in Patients Undergoing Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery.Global Spine J 15, no. 3_suppl (July 2025): 135S-147S. https://doi.org/10.1177/21925682241264221.
Nielsen CJ, Smith JS, Martin AR, Rocos B, Jentzsch T, Ravinsky RA, et al. Identification and Management of Neurologic Complications in Patients Undergoing Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery. Global Spine J. 2025 Jul;15(3_suppl):135S-147S.
Nielsen, Christopher J., et al. “Identification and Management of Neurologic Complications in Patients Undergoing Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery.Global Spine J, vol. 15, no. 3_suppl, July 2025, pp. 135S-147S. Pubmed, doi:10.1177/21925682241264221.
Nielsen CJ, Smith JS, Martin AR, Rocos B, Jentzsch T, Ravinsky RA, Oitment C, Pahuta M, Kato S, Lewis SJ, AO Spine Knowledge Forum Deformity. Identification and Management of Neurologic Complications in Patients Undergoing Adult Spinal Deformity Surgery. Global Spine J. 2025 Jul;15(3_suppl):135S-147S.
Journal cover image

Published In

Global Spine J

DOI

ISSN

2192-5682

Publication Date

July 2025

Volume

15

Issue

3_suppl

Start / End Page

135S / 147S

Location

England

Related Subject Headings

  • 3202 Clinical sciences