https://www.selleckchem.com/products/t0070907.html AF should be taken into account when referring a patient for MC treatment. AF may be related with worse outcomes in patients undergoing MC implantation, including long-term mortality, major bleeding, and rehospitalization. AF should be taken into account when referring a patient for MC treatment.This study aimed to verify the relationship between the number of fusion level and the risk of screw loosening by using cortical bone trajectory (CBT) screws in patients with lumbar degenerative disease.We retrospectively reviewed the serial plain radiograph images of lumbar degenerative disease patients who had undergone posterior fixation and fusion surgery with CBT from 2014. All included patients should have been followed-up with computed tomography scan or plain radiograph for at least 6 months after operation. We individually evaluated the prevalence of screw loosening according to each vertebral level. We also determined whether the number of screw fixation affected the prevalence of screw loosening and whether S1 fixation increased the risk of screw loosening.The screw-loosening rates were high at the S1 level. Moreover, although fixation involved to S1, the loosening rates evidently increased (Fisher exact test, Pā=ā.002). The screw-loosening rate was 6.56% in 2 level fusion. However, it increased with the number of fusion levels (3 level 25.00%, 4 level 51.16%, and 5 level 62.50%). To investigate if the number of fusion level affected the S1 screw loosening, we classified the cohort of patients into either involving S1 (S1+ group) or not (S1- group) according to different fusion levels (). The screw loosening between 2 group in 2 (5.56% vs 6.98%) and 3 fusion level (26.32% vs 22.73%) did not exhibit any significant difference. Interestingly, significantly high screw loosening was found in 4 fusion level (60.00% vs 15.38%), indicating that the higher fusion level (4 level) can directly increase the risk of S1 screw