Percutaneous vertebroplasty for osteolytic metastases and myeloma: effects of the percentage of lesion filling and the leakage of methyl methacrylate at clinical follow-up.

Male Spinal Neoplasms Time Factors Palliative Care Bone Cements Methylmethacrylate Middle Aged Radiology, Interventional Spine 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Humans Methylmethacrylates Female Prospective Studies Multiple Myeloma Tomography, X-Ray Computed Injections, Spinal Extravasation of Diagnostic and Therapeutic Materials Follow-Up Studies Pain Measurement
DOI: 10.1148/radiology.200.2.8685351 Publication Date: 2014-07-08T20:29:50Z
ABSTRACT
To determine whether the percentage of vertebral lesion filling and the leakage of methyl methacrylate have any clinical significance at follow-up.Forty percutaneous vertebroplasties were performed for metastases (30 cases) and myeloma (10 cases) in 37 patients. A computed tomographic scan was obtained 1-8 hours after methyl methacrylate injection and was used to assess the percentage of lesion filling by methyl methacrylate and the leakage of methyl methacrylate into the epidural tissues, neural foramina, intervertebral disks, venous plexus, and paravertebral tissue. The results were correlated with those obtained at clinical follow-up.Partial or complete pain relief was sustained in 36 of 37 patients. Pain relief was not proportional to the percentage of lesion filling. Clinical improvement was maintained in most patients. The 15 epidural leaks, eight intradiskal leaks, and two venous leaks of methyl methacrylate had no clinical importance. Two of eight foraminal leaks produced nerve root compression that required decompressive surgery. One of 21 paravertebral leaks produced transitory femoral neuropathy.Pain relief can occur despite insufficient lesion filling. In most patients, intradiskal and paravertebral leaks of cement had no clinical importance.
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