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1.
N Am Spine Soc J ; 18: 100323, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38746017

ABSTRACT

Background: Postoperative infection is a complication of spinal fusion surgery resulting in increased patient morbidity. Strategies including intraoperative application of powdered vancomycin have been proposed to reduce the incidence of infection; however, such antimicrobial effects are short-lived. Methods: Instrumentation of the L4-L5 vertebrae was performed mimicking pedicle screw and rod fixation in 30 rats. Titanium instrumentation inoculated with either PBS or 1×105 CFU bioluminescent MRSA, along with biomimetic bone grafts infused with varying concentrations of vancomycin and 125 µg of rhBMP-2 (BioMim-rhBMP-2-VCM) were implanted prior to closure. Infection was quantified during the six-week postoperative period using bioluminescent imaging. Arthrodesis was evaluated using micro-CT. Results: Infected animals receiving a bone graft infused with low-dose (0.18 mg/g) or high-dose vancomycin (0.89 mg/g) both exhibited significantly lower bioluminescent signal over the six-week postoperative period than control animals inoculated with MRSA and implanted with bone grafts lacking vancomycin (p=.019 and p=.007, respectively). Both low and high-dose vancomycin-infused grafts also resulted in a statistically significant reduction in average bioluminescence when compared to control animals (p=.027 and p=.047, respectively), independent of time. MicroCT analysis of animals from each group revealed pseudoarthrosis only in the control group, suggesting a correlation between infection and pseudoarthrosis. MRSA-inoculated control animals also had significantly less bone volume formation on micro-CT than the PBS-inoculated control cohort (p<.001), the MRSA+low-dose vancomycin-infused bone graft cohort (p<.001), and the MRSA+high-dose vancomycin-infused bone graft cohort (p<.001). Conclusion: BioMim-rhBMP-2-VCM presents a novel tissue engineering approach to simultaneously promoting arthrodesis and antimicrobial prophylaxis in spinal fusion. Despite mixed evidence of potential osteotoxicity of vancomycin reported in literature, BioMim-rhBMP-2-VCM preserved arthrodesis and osteogenesis with increasing vancomycin loading doses due to the graft's osteoinductive composition.

2.
World Neurosurg ; 158: e746-e753, 2022 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34800733

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Text message-based interventions have been demonstrated to be a valuable monitoring tool across various conditions. Here, we aimed to describe our early experience using a newly developed text message-based platform designed to track symptoms in spine surgery patients. METHODS: We used the Informed Mindset Medical (IMM) platform to automatically send text messages with secure and encrypted hyperlinks to enrolled patients. Patient symptoms were monitored using well-standardized functional assessments. Limited patient data and responses were stored on a Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act-compliant SQL cloud-based server database. RESULTS: In 3 months, 101 patients scheduled for elective spine surgery accepted participation in our pilot study. Overall, 71.2% of the enrolled patients responded to at least 1 preoperative baseline questionnaire. The response rates were similar across attendings, questionnaire bundles (cervical vs. thoracolumbar), genders, and age groups. The overall preoperative IMM pain scores were found to correlate positively with the preoperative electronic medical record pain rates. Similarly, the overall preoperative IMM and electronic medical record pain scores correlated positively with the IMM-collected Neck Disability Index/Oswestry Disability Index scores. From an initial 71.2%, the response rate decreased to 54.9% for the 6-week follow-up questionnaires. CONCLUSIONS: Our preliminary findings support the reliability of this text message-based strategy to monitor symptoms in spine surgery patients. Further studies are warranted to explore strategies to increase the response rate and expand this platform's clinical and research applicability.


Subject(s)
Text Messaging , Female , Humans , Male , Pain , Patient Reported Outcome Measures , Pilot Projects , Reproducibility of Results
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