DYNESYS

DYNESYS

Dynamic Stabilization

METHOD: Peer reviewed English language publications of Therapeutic Studies only – investigating the results of treatment – for Dynesys dynamic stabilization system specifically were evaluated.

TOTAL: 9 DYNESYS STUDIES

3 Studies

3 Studies

3 Studies

3 Level IV

3 Level IV

3 Level IV

Favorable, neutral, and unfavorable studies were equal in number and Evidence Based Medicine strength with all being Level IV ratings.

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DYNESYS
Studies Favorable: Total 3

Level IV: 3 Studies

1. The Surgical Treatment of the Lumbar Disc Prolapse: Nucleotomy With Additional Transpedicular Dynamic Stabilization Versus Nucleotomy Alone.
Putzier, Michael MD; Schneider, Sascha V. MD; Funk, Julia F. MD; Tohtz, Stephan W. MD; Perka, Carsten PhD
Clinical Case Series
Spine. 30(5):E109-E114, March 1, 2005.
Case series. Less degeneration after discectomy with Dynesys.
Level IV – Favorable

2. Stabilization of the Lumbar Spine Using the Dynamic Neutralization System.
By George S. Sapkas, MD; George S. Themistocleous, MD; Andreas F. Mavrogenis, MD; Ioannis S. Benetos, MD; Nikolaos Metaxas, MD; Panayiotis J. Papagelopoulos, MD, DSc
ORTHOPEDICS 2007; 30:859
Retrospective case series. Results comparable to fusion. Felt to be safe and effective.
Level IV – Favorable

3. The dynamic neutralization system for the spine: a multi-center study of a novel non-fusion system
Thomas M. Stoll, Gilles Dubois and Othmar Schwarzenbach
Eur Spine J. Oct 2002; 11 Suppl 2: S170-178
Case series. Results comparable to fusion. Felt to be safe and effective.
Level IV – Favorable

DYNESYS
Studies UnFavorable: Total 3

Level IV: 3 Studies

1. Clinical Experience With the Dynesys Semirigid Fixation System for the Lumbar Spine: Surgical and Patient-Oriented Outcome in 50 Cases After an Average of 2 Years [Clinical Case Series]
Grob, Dieter MD*; Benini, Arnoldo MD*; Junge, Astrid PhD*; Mannion, Anne F. PhD*†
Spine:Volume 30(3)1 February 2005pp 324-331
Retrospective case series of 50 patients. At 2 years, 50% patient dissatisfaction. Reoperation rate high.
Level IV – UnFavorable

2. Dynamic Neutralization of the Lumbar Spine After Microsurgical Decompression in Acquired Lumbar Spinal Stenosis and Segmental Instability. [Clinical Case Series]
Wurgler-Hauri, Carola C. MD; Kalbarczyk, Andreas MD; Wiesli, Markus MD; Landolt, Hans MD; Fandino, Javier MD
Spine. 33(3):E66-E72, February 1, 2008.
Case series with 20% reoperation at 1 year. Results better than nothing or other stabilization systems.
Level IV – Unfavorable

3. Dynamic Stabilization in the Surgical Management of Painful Lumbar Spinal Disorders. Focus Paper
Nockels, Russ P. MD
Spine. Painful Motion Segment. 30(16S) Supplement:S68-S72, August 15, 2005.
Literature review, including Dynesys, of case series or AME two** star studies. Guarded results that may help with future developments and randomized controlled studies need to be done.
Level IV – Unfavorable

DYNESYS
Studies Neutral: Total 3

Level IV: 3 Studies

1. Minimum Four-Year Follow-up of Spinal Stenosis With Degenerative Spondylolisthesis Treated With Decompression and Dynamic Stabilization. Clinical Case Series
Schaeren, Stefan MD *; Broger, Ivan MD +; Jeanneret, Bernhard MD *
Spine. 33(18):E636-E642, August 15, 2008.
Case series with degeneration continuing, though satisfied patients.
Level IV – Neutral

2. The Dynesys Lumbar Spinal Stabilization System: A Preliminary Report on Positional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings.
Beastall, James MRCS *; Karadimas, Efthimios *; Siddiqui, Manal FRCS *; Nicol, Malcolm MRCS *; Hughes, Justin MRCS +; Smith, Francis FRCR *; Wardlaw, Douglas FRCS *
Spine. 32(6):685-690, March 15, 2007.
Case series of 24 patients. At 9 mos. F/U MRI showed decrease in motion at index level and decrease anterior disc ht. Level IV – Neutral

3. Point of View: Dynamic Stabilization in Addition to Decompression for Lumbar Spinal Stenosis With Degenerative Spondylolisthesis
Sengupta, Dilip K. MD
Spine:Volume 31(4)15 February 2006 p450
[Clinical Case Series: Point of View]
Case series. Clinical improvement. Question of long term viability. Complications present.
Level IV – Neutral

LEVEL I

Randomized, controlled clinical trials. Researchers would use a computer program to randomly assign patients with back pain into two groups of 20. The first group (placebo group known as the control) would drink water (that only tasted like pomegranate juice but was not) for 10 days. The second group would drink real pomegranate juice for 10 days. None of the patients would know if they were drinking the real pomegranate juice or not. (This is called a blinded study). Then a researcher who does not know which person drank what (which now makes this a what’s called a “double blinded” study) would interview the patients to determine if their back pain was reduced, worsened or stayed the same. After this was all done, the information about which patients drank what would then be revealed. One could then see if those who drank the real pomegranate juice were better or not than the water drinking group.

LEVEL II

Non-randomized, prospective comparative study. A researcher looks at 40 patients medical records to select 20 patients for the pomegranate drinking group and 20 patients for the control group who will drink water. This is called a “cohort,” namely a control and experimental patient make a cohort. Here the researcher may introduce his own bias whether he intends to or not. If he believes pomegranate is a safe, effective treatment for back pain then whether he means to or not he may put the healthier patients with less back pain in the pomegranate group and patients complaining of more back pain in the water-drinking group. (This particular bias is called “selection bias.” See section on types of research bias.)

LEVEL III

Retrospective (already occurred) comparative study or case controlled study (each “experimental“ patient is matched to a patient that never had the experimental). This is not a reliable standard for determining one treatment over another, though it can be helpful to, say, see how many complications a certain treatment has. Researchers do a retrospective study for example reviewing 20 patient records of patients who reported they have been drinking pomegranate juice in the past and then 20 patients who have not reported drinking pomegranate juice. Then the researchers review the patients’ medical records determine if the back pain was reported better, worse or stayed the same. Here again, the selection process may introduce bias intentionally or not. In this case it may not only be selection bias, but could involve “recall” bias, or “expectation bias” or “attention bias.” (See Bias in Research section).

LEVEL IV

Case series do not determine success or failure of a treatment compared to other treatments or no treatment at all. Researchers or a physician does a case study on 20 patients who drink pomegranate juice for 10 days and then report the results. In this case there is no control group or comparison to patients who are not drinking pomegranate juice. It does not take into consideration that back pain could get better in 10 days if the patient takes nothing at all for the pain. These studies are easier and cheaper. They can be of value to determine better methods of doing a particular treatment, or what the complications of a certain treatment are, but NOT for determining if one treatment is better than another.

LEVEL V

Expert opinion. One physician expert’s opinion on if pomegranate juice helps reduce back pain. No original research is conducted. Instead, just a written opinion or editorial that may talk about other research and give opinions, but no clinical study is conducted. AME considers this to be one step above hearsay for determining one treatment over another, though it may be valuable for stimulating discussion and ideas on a particular topic.

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