Introduction
The lumbar interbody fusion represents an effective surgical intervention for patients with lumbar degenerative diseases, spondylolisthesis, disc herniation, pseudoarthrosis and spinal deformities.1 This surgery can be made by different approaches, one is the anterolateral transpsoas approach (ALPA) initially described by Bertagnoli & Vazquez in 2003.2 The ALPA allows access to the lumbar disc space and vertebral body without extensive muscle dissection. The surgeon accesses retroperitoneum through a lateral incision and bluntly dissects through the abdominal wall and psoas muscle to access the lumbar spine.3
Through this transpsoas approach, many of the severe complications associated with other approaches may be avoided. Specifically, early investigations have suggested that rates of iatrogenic nerve root injury, epidural fibrosis, bowel injury, blood loss, postoperative pain, and iatrogenic spinal instability may potentially decrease when compared with other approaches.4
Although ALPA is a safe approach; a variety of complications have been described, such as injury to the nerves passing through psoas muscle (lateral cutaneous nerve, genitofemoral nerve, lumbosacral plexus), which can be transient or permanent, psoas or quadriceps palsy and bowel, urethral and kidney injuries have been reported in the literature.5
An incisional hernia is «Any abdominal wall gap with or without a bulge in the area of a postoperative scar perceptible or palpable by clinical examination or imaging».6 It is common after abdominal surgery and anterior spine surgeries including anterior lumbar interbody fusion (ALIF); however, it is rare with ALPA, with only a few cases reported by the literature.5 Galan et al.3 reported the first case of incisional hernia following a minimal invasive transpsoas approach in a 74-year-old female. In other literature, the incisional hernia was described after procedures for aortic, urologic/kidney disease with an incidence of 1%.7,8
In 2009, the European Hernia Society (EHS) defined flank hernia as primarily located 3 cm above and below the umbilicus, lateral to the rectus sheath, but with possible extension into the neighboring regions.9 The flank region was considered by the EHS to be a subclass of the lateral abdominal wall hernia class; the other subclasses of lateral hernia were denoted as lumbar, subcostal, and iliac.9
Publication with the keywords: «flank hernia» «OLIF» «XLIF» «incisional hernia» and «complications». «Oblique lateral interbody fusion» «xtreme lateral interbody fusion», «transpsoas approach» «ALPA» were searched in PubMed, OVID, ScienceDirect, MEDLINE, from 2000 until 2018, a total of two articles were retrieved, most of the reports and series from retroperitoneum approaches were secondary to urologic/kidney and vascular diseases, which were not included.
Case report
A 75-year-old female with one year low-back-ache with insidious onset, left leg irradiation, neurogenic claudication within 25 meters and feeling of numbness and paresthesias since 2017, she referred multiple treatments including Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), spine rehabilitation, acupuncture, and other alternative therapies, without improvement of the symptomatology. As medical antecedents she reported hypothyroidism; surgical history of cholecystectomy in 1993 and right hip fracture treated with total hip replacement in 2017.
Detailed systemic and neurological examination revealed coronal deformity presented with low back pain Numerical Analog Scale (NAS) 7/10.
Lumbo-sacral spine imaging studies revealed spondylolisthesis L4-L5 (Meyerding’s grade I), degenerative scoliosis (Figure 1A and B) (AEBI’s grade I) with right concavity of 14o (Cobb’s angle) and lumbar spinal stenosis from L2 to S1 (Figure 2A and B).
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Figure 1: A) X-Ray AP projection, an image of degenerative scoliosis with right concavity and right hip prosthesis. B) X-Ray lateral projection, revealing spondylolisthesis Meyerdin I L4-L5.
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Figure 2: A) Magnetic resonance imaging T2 sequence, axial projection; with facet hypertrophy and spinal cord compression due to intervertebral disc herniation. B) Magnetic resonance imaging T2 sequence, Sagital projection; showing spondylolisthesis Meyerdin I L4-L5, with spinal cord involvement.
Operative procedure. The patient underwent spine surgery with a double approach: ALPA, discectomy and lumbar cages placed on L2-L3, L3-L4, L4-L5 segments; and posterior approach with bilateral decompression and instrumentation with pedicular screws fixation from L1 to S1.
Surgical technique. Under general anesthesia, with neuromonitoring electrodes in place, the patient was positioned in right lateral decubitus protecting osseous prominences; using a C arm fluoroscopic device we identified the levels to intervene and marked the skin, antisepsia, and surgical drapes were applied as protocol, the senior spine surgeon performed a lateral lumbar transpsoas approach. At first, 7 cm oblique incision was made over the skin, parallel to the fibers of the major oblique muscle. The major oblique, minor oblique, and the transverse muscles were anatomized following the muscles fibers direction, subsequently, retroperitoneal space was identified and dissected, the psoas muscle was exposed and cut through; the L2-L3, L3-L4 and L4-L5 segments were identified and dissected, the vertebrae platforms were prepared and the intervertebral space dilators were introduced, the interbody cages were filled with demineralized bone matrix and then placed. The adequate colocation was corroborated with image intensifier; layered suture was performed, first of all, the transversal fascia, external oblique fascia, fat tissue and dermis with 0 Vycril and outermost the skin was closed with nylon 3-0 and a film dressing was used to cover the wound (Figure 3A and B).
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Figure 3: A) X-Ray AP projection, post-surgery control image showing the material used to align the spine from L1 to S1. B) X-Ray lateral projection, post-surgery control image showing a better view of the screw’s position and the inter-vertebral-body cages of L2-L3, L3-L4, L4-L5.
The patient presented with a painless left lateral abdominal swelling two months postoperative, clinical examination exposed an oval tumor of 8 by 13cm was found, it was movable and reducible (Figures 4 and 5). A computed tomography scan study revealed a lateral bulging of the abdominal wall and a delayed incisional hernia was diagnosed. She was sent to a general surgeon for evaluation and treatment (Figure 6A and B).
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Figure 4: Clinical photo of the left side of the patient after surgery, evidencing the ALPA approach wound [→] and the affected area [→].
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Figure 5: Clinical photo of the back of the patient after surgery, where we can observe the posterior approach wound [→], unclogging the affected area [→].
Discussion
The development of incisional hernia results from non-healing or late disruption of the fascial layers of the wound. It occurs in approximately 1% of incisions after primary closure, it is most frequently presented in abdominal, flank, and groin wounds.10
Two mechanisms are described for Lateral incisional hernias: an incisional hernia can occur through outpouching of denervated abdominal layers, these hernias are very difficult to repair due to incompetence of the entire muscular wall;11 the second type is the focal herniation through a wall defect in the presence of normal abdominal muscular tone.3
The likely explanation for delayed hernia, has been described due to diferent etiologies, such as the muscular atrophy follow by iatrogenic denervation during the disection of the abdominal wall muscles, even the incidental nerve section while clousin the surgical wound or the use of electrocauterium.12 The muscles lose their integrity following denervation and atrophy, and the abdominal wall allows the herniation. Hence blunt and careful dissection of muscular layers is recommended to prevent denervation and subsequent atrophy.13
Galan et al, described a 75-years-old female patient, who had the flank herniation onset four weeks after the surgery with palpation tenderness, also with multiple treatments dueto her spinal desease, hypothiridism, hypertention, arthritis and the antecedent of laparoscopic colecistectomy seven years prior differing from our patient who had laparoscopic surgery 26 years before the ALPA procedure and also with an intervention due to the rigth hip fracture; they recommend to place the surgical incision as posterior as possible in the thicker transversalis fascia and use of blunt dissection technique due to its importance to avoid denervation and resultant muscle atrophy.3
Dakwar et al. reported injury to motor nerves supplying the abdominal muscles caused by the direct surgical trauma during dissection of abdominal layers and retroperitoneum, producing paresis. They described 10 patients (of 568, incidence 1.8%) with abdominal paresis developed after minimally invasive lateral transpsoas spine surgery.11
Additionally, direct repair of the fascia is crucial and perhaps a non-absorbable suture may provide a more durable closure.3
The reported case is a highly unusual complication of the transpsoas approach to the lumbar spine.
If surgeons are aware of this complication, the meticulous dissection surgery could prevent muscle denervation and weakening of the musculofascial layers, as well as the incision as posterior as possible in the thicker transversalis fascia. Adequate layered wound closure must be performed to avoid herniation.