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AOSpine Consensus Paper on Nomenclature for Working-Channel Endoscopic Spinal Procedures

  • Christoph P. Hofstetter
  • , Yong Ahn
  • , Gun Choi
  • , J. N.A. Gibson
  • , S. Ruetten
  • , Yue Zhou
  • , Zhen Zhou Li
  • , Christoph J. Siepe
  • , Ralf Wagner
  • , Jun Ho Lee
  • , Koichi Sairyo
  • , Kyung Chul Choi
  • , Chien Min Chen
  • , A. E. Telfeian
  • , Xifeng Zhang
  • , Arun Banhot
  • , Pramod V. Lokhande
  • , N. Prada
  • , Jian Shen
  • , F. C. Cortinas
  • N. P. Brooks, Peter Van Daele, Vit Kotheeranurak, Saqib Hasan, Gun Keorochana, Mohammed Assous, Roger Härtl, Jin Sung Kim
  • University of Washington
  • Gachon University
  • Chungdam Wooridul Spine Hospital
  • Spire Murrayfield Hospital
  • St. Anna Hospital Herne/Marien Hospital Herne University Hospital/Marien Hospital Witten
  • Army Medical University
  • Chongqing Medical University
  • Schoen Clinic Munich-Harlaching
  • LIGAMENTA Spine Center Frankfurt
  • Kyung Hee University
  • Tokushima University
  • Leon Wiltse Memorial Hospital
  • Changhua Christian Hospital
  • Da-Yeh University
  • Rhode Island Hospital
  • General Hospital of People's Liberation Army
  • Columbia Asia Hospital
  • Smt. Kashibai Navale Medical College and General Hospital
  • Foscal International Clinic
  • Mohawk Valley Orthopedics
  • Hospital Angeles Pedregal Camino Santa Teresa
  • University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • O.L.V. van Lourdes Ziekenhuis
  • Queen Savang Vadhana Memorial Hospital
  • Mahidol University
  • Razi Spine Clinic-Minimally Invasive Spine Surgery
  • Cornell University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

133 Scopus citations

Abstract

Study Design: International consensus paper on a unified nomenclature for full-endoscopic spine surgery. Objectives: Minimally invasive endoscopic spinal procedures have undergone rapid development during the past decade. Evolution of working-channel endoscopes and surgical instruments as well as innovation in surgical techniques have expanded the types of spinal pathology that can be addressed. However, there is in the literature a heterogeneous nomenclature defining approach corridors and procedures, and this lack of common language has hampered communication between endoscopic spine surgeons, patients, hospitals, and insurance providers. Methods: The current report summarizes the nomenclature reported for working-channel endoscopic procedures that address cervical, thoracic, and lumbar spinal pathology. Results: We propose a uniform system that defines the working-channel endoscope (full-endoscopic), approach corridor (anterior, posterior, interlaminar, transforaminal), spinal segment (cervical, thoracic, lumbar), and procedure performed (eg, discectomy, foraminotomy). We suggest the following nomenclature for the most common full-endoscopic procedures: posterior endoscopic cervical foraminotomy (PECF), transforaminal endoscopic thoracic discectomy (TETD), transforaminal endoscopic lumbar discectomy (TELD), transforaminal lumbar foraminotomy (TELF), interlaminar endoscopic lumbar discectomy (IELD), interlaminar endoscopic lateral recess decompression (IE-LRD), and lumbar endoscopic unilateral laminotomy for bilateral decompression (LE-ULBD). Conclusions: We believe that it is critical to delineate a consensus nomenclature to facilitate uniformity of working-channel endoscopic procedures within academic scholarship. This will hopefully facilitate development, standardization of procedures, teaching, and widespread acceptance of full-endoscopic spinal procedures.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)111S-121S
JournalGlobal Spine Journal
Volume10
Issue number2_suppl
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Apr 2020

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2019.

Keywords

  • consensus
  • full-endoscopic spine surgery
  • interlaminar
  • lateral recess decompression
  • minimally invasive spinal surgery
  • nomenclature
  • transforaminal
  • working-channel endoscope

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