Clinical and pathologic characteristics of lumbar disk herniation in the elderly.

2000 
: The clinical and pathologic characteristics of lumbar disk herniation in 23 elderly patients (15 men and 8 women) who required surgical treatment were investigated. Average age at surgery was 67.3 years, and average follow-up was 23 months. Preoperatively, the predominant symptom was severe unilateral leg pain, and 13 patients were nonambulatory because of leg pain. Operative treatment included wide laminectomy in 8, hemilaminectomy in 3, fenestration in 10, and osteoplastic laminectomy in 2 patients. Four (17%) patients had disk herniation at the L2-L3 or L3-L4 level. Sequestered herniation with or without migration was observed in 15 (65%) patients. Of 14 sequestered disk fragments examined histologically, 8 (57%) specimens contained cartilaginous or bony end plate with anulus fibrosus or nucleus pulposus. Postoperatively, results were rated as excellent in 11 patients and good in 12; no patient was rated as fair or poor. Severe leg pain affecting activities of daily life is a predominant symptom of disk herniation in the elderly. For patients in whom conservative treatment has failed, operative treatment should be considered. In lumbar disk herniation in the elderly, the incidence of cephalad and lateral herniation is higher than in younger patients. In addition, sequestered and migrated herniations including end plate are frequent.
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