Spinal shortening and monosegmental posterior spondylodesis in the management of dorsal and lumbar unstable injuries

Introduction: Patients with spinal injuries have been treated in the past by laminectomy in an attempt to decompress the spinal cord. The results have shown insignificant improvement or even a worsening of neurologic function and decreased stability without effectively removing the anterior bone and...

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Main Author: Tarek A Aly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd. 2011-01-01
Series:Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.4103/0976-3147.80082
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spelling doaj-754801a6b258441799c1e5fdfc1c91cd2021-04-02T15:58:42ZengThieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd.Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice0976-31470976-31552011-01-01020101702210.4103/0976-3147.80082Spinal shortening and monosegmental posterior spondylodesis in the management of dorsal and lumbar unstable injuriesTarek A Aly0Assistant professor of orthopedic surgery, Tanta university school of medicine, Tanta, EgyptIntroduction: Patients with spinal injuries have been treated in the past by laminectomy in an attempt to decompress the spinal cord. The results have shown insignificant improvement or even a worsening of neurologic function and decreased stability without effectively removing the anterior bone and disc fragments compressing the spinal cord. The primary indication for anterior decompression and grafting is narrowing of the spinal canal with neurologic deficits that cannot be resolved by any other approach. One must think of subsequent surgical intervention for increased stability and compressive posterior fusion with short-armed internal fi xators. Aim: To analyze the results and efficacy of spinal shortening combined with interbody fusion technique for the management of dorsal and lumbar unstable injuries. Materials and Methods: Twenty-three patients with traumatic fractures and or fracture-dislocation of dorsolumbar spine with neurologic deficit are presented. All had radiologic evidence of spinal cord or cauda equina compression, with either paraplegia or paraparesis. Patients underwent recapping laminoplasty in the thoracic or lumbar spine for decompression of spinal cord. The T-saw was used for division of the posterior elements. After decompression of the cord and removal of the extruded bone fragments and disc material, the excised laminae were replaced exactly in situ to their original anatomic position. Then application of a compression force via monosegmental transpedicular fixation was done, allowing vertebral end-plate compression and interbody fusion. Results: Lateral Cobb angle (T10–L2) was reduced from 26 to 4 degrees after surgery. The shortened vertebral body united and no or minimal loss of correction was seen. The preoperative vertebral kyphosis averaged +17 degrees and was corrected to +7 degrees at follow-up with the sagittal index improving from 0.59 to 0.86. The segmental local kyphosis was reduced from +15 degrees to −3 degrees. Radiography demonstrated anatomically correct reconstruction in all patients, as well as solid fusion. Conclusion: This technique permits circumferential decompression of the spinal cord through a posterior approach and posterior interbody fusion.http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.4103/0976-3147.80082injurylaminoplastyspineshorteningspondylodesis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tarek A Aly
spellingShingle Tarek A Aly
Spinal shortening and monosegmental posterior spondylodesis in the management of dorsal and lumbar unstable injuries
Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice
injury
laminoplasty
spine
shortening
spondylodesis
author_facet Tarek A Aly
author_sort Tarek A Aly
title Spinal shortening and monosegmental posterior spondylodesis in the management of dorsal and lumbar unstable injuries
title_short Spinal shortening and monosegmental posterior spondylodesis in the management of dorsal and lumbar unstable injuries
title_full Spinal shortening and monosegmental posterior spondylodesis in the management of dorsal and lumbar unstable injuries
title_fullStr Spinal shortening and monosegmental posterior spondylodesis in the management of dorsal and lumbar unstable injuries
title_full_unstemmed Spinal shortening and monosegmental posterior spondylodesis in the management of dorsal and lumbar unstable injuries
title_sort spinal shortening and monosegmental posterior spondylodesis in the management of dorsal and lumbar unstable injuries
publisher Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd.
series Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice
issn 0976-3147
0976-3155
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Introduction: Patients with spinal injuries have been treated in the past by laminectomy in an attempt to decompress the spinal cord. The results have shown insignificant improvement or even a worsening of neurologic function and decreased stability without effectively removing the anterior bone and disc fragments compressing the spinal cord. The primary indication for anterior decompression and grafting is narrowing of the spinal canal with neurologic deficits that cannot be resolved by any other approach. One must think of subsequent surgical intervention for increased stability and compressive posterior fusion with short-armed internal fi xators. Aim: To analyze the results and efficacy of spinal shortening combined with interbody fusion technique for the management of dorsal and lumbar unstable injuries. Materials and Methods: Twenty-three patients with traumatic fractures and or fracture-dislocation of dorsolumbar spine with neurologic deficit are presented. All had radiologic evidence of spinal cord or cauda equina compression, with either paraplegia or paraparesis. Patients underwent recapping laminoplasty in the thoracic or lumbar spine for decompression of spinal cord. The T-saw was used for division of the posterior elements. After decompression of the cord and removal of the extruded bone fragments and disc material, the excised laminae were replaced exactly in situ to their original anatomic position. Then application of a compression force via monosegmental transpedicular fixation was done, allowing vertebral end-plate compression and interbody fusion. Results: Lateral Cobb angle (T10–L2) was reduced from 26 to 4 degrees after surgery. The shortened vertebral body united and no or minimal loss of correction was seen. The preoperative vertebral kyphosis averaged +17 degrees and was corrected to +7 degrees at follow-up with the sagittal index improving from 0.59 to 0.86. The segmental local kyphosis was reduced from +15 degrees to −3 degrees. Radiography demonstrated anatomically correct reconstruction in all patients, as well as solid fusion. Conclusion: This technique permits circumferential decompression of the spinal cord through a posterior approach and posterior interbody fusion.
topic injury
laminoplasty
spine
shortening
spondylodesis
url http://www.thieme-connect.de/DOI/DOI?10.4103/0976-3147.80082
work_keys_str_mv AT tarekaaly spinalshorteningandmonosegmentalposteriorspondylodesisinthemanagementofdorsalandlumbarunstableinjuries
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