已发表论文

糖尿病对脊柱手术后围手术期并发症的影响:荟萃分析

 

Authors Luo W, Sun R, Jiang H, Ma X

Received 24 August 2018

Accepted for publication 13 November 2018

Published 12 December 2018 Volume 2018:14 Pages 2415—2423

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/TCRM.S185221

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single-blind

Peer reviewers approved by Dr Justinn Cochran

Peer reviewer comments 3

Editor who approved publication: Professor Deyun Wang

Background: Degenerative spinal diseases and diabetes mellitus (DM) have increasingly become a social and economic burden. The effect of DM on spinal surgery complications reported by previous studies remains controversial.
Methods: We searched MEDLINE, Cochrane CENTRAL, ScienceDirect, EMBASE, and Google Scholar to identify studies reporting the relationship between DM and spinal surgery complications. Two independent reviewers performed independent data abstraction. The I2 statistic was used to assess heterogeneity. A fixed-effects or random-effects model was used for the meta-analysis.
Results: Twenty-four studies met the inclusion criteria. Surgical site infection and the incidence of deep venous thrombosis after spinal surgery were significantly higher in patients with than in patients without diabetes, and the length of hospital stay was significantly longer in patients with diabetes (<0.05). No significant differences were observed in the risk of reoperation, blood loss, and operation time between patients with and those without diabetes (>0.05).
Conclusion: Patients with diabetes have a higher risk when undergoing spinal surgery than patients without diabetes. Diabetes increases the risks of postoperative mortality, surgical site infection, deep venous thrombosis, and a prolonged hospitalization time after spinal surgery.
Keywords: diabetes mellitus, spine, surgery, complication




Figure 1 Flowchart of the study selection process.