首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The relief of myelopathy usually is unsatisfactory by a conventional Gallie type atlantoaxial fusion for patients with rheumatoid arthritis who have irreducible atlantoaxial dislocation. To accomplish a decompressive laminectomy of the atlas in the treatment of myelopathy, the authors have been performing a new surgical procedure since 1985 for occipitocervical fusion using a rectangular rod. The postoperative outcomes for 25 patients with rheumatoid arthritis were evaluated clinically and radiographically with a 3- to 11-year (mean, 6.5 years) followup. A decompressive laminectomy of the atlas accompanied the fusion in 21 of the 25 patients. The incidence of occipital or nuchal pains improved notably in most cases, and myelopathy was relieved in 12 of 18 (67%) cases, showing an improvement of more than one level based on Ranawat's criteria. No serious postoperative complications were seen, except for one case of a failed bone union. The cumulative survival in patients with myelopathy was 79.4% in the first 5 years after operation and 27.5% at 10 years. Occipitocervical fusion using a rectangular rod accompanied by a decompressive laminectomy of the atlas can contribute to the relief of a neurologic deficit in an irreducible atlantoaxial dislocation in rheumatoid arthritis.  相似文献   

2.
Four children with Down syndrome who had developed atlantoaxial dislocation and myelopathy underwent occipitocervical fusion with Luque loop rod instrumentation and decompressive laminectomy of C1. The postoperative results are presented and the indications discussed. This procedure provides many advantages in the surgical treatment of Down syndrome compared with the conventional procedures, because of the associated mental retardation that makes the postoperative management very complicated.  相似文献   

3.
STUDY DESIGN: A study was performed to measure the vertebral body depths in different locations from C2 to C7. OBJECTIVES: To measure the vertebral body depths in 10 linear dimension from C2 to C7. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Anterior plate-screw fixation of the cervical spine has been the common surgical procedure for management of multilevel degenerative disc disease and fracture dislocation. However, injury to the spinal cord during drill or screw placement is the most feared complication of this procedure. It is beneficial for one to have a knowledge of the vertebral body depths in different locations of the vertebral body before anterior cervical plating. METHODS: Twenty-seven cervical spines from C2 to C7 were evaluated directly for this study. Anatomic evaluation of the vertebral body included the anteroposterior midline sagittal depth and the anteroposterior parasagittal depth 5 mm lateral to midline on the superior and inferior endplates, as well as on the middle body. Measurements also were made of anteroposterior parasagittal vertebral depth with both medial and lateral inclination of 10 degrees, with respect to the parasagittal plane of the vertebral body. RESULTS: In general, the measurements of male specimens were larger than those of female specimens. Significant differences were noted at 21 measurements over C3 through C7. The mean depths of the superior endplate for all male and female specimens increased consistently from C3 to C7. The mean depths of the inferior endplate varied but generally increased from C2 to C6, then decreased to C7. The mean sagittal and parasagittal middle vertebral body depths were both 14 mm. CONCLUSIONS: This information, in conjunction with preoperative computed tomographic evaluation, may be helpful in determining proper screw length during anterior plating of the cervical spine.  相似文献   

4.
Forty-three patients with idiopathic carpal tunnel syndrome, confirmed by nerve conduction studies and treated by surgery, were compared clinically and radiologically with 43 age- and sex-matched control patients. Patients with carpal tunnel syndrome had a significantly greater prevalence of lateral humeral epicondylitis (tennis elbow) (33%) than controls (7%). Randomised reading of the cervical spine radiographs in ignorance of the groups to which they belonged showed no significant difference in the prevalence of either intervertebral disc degeneration or intraforaminal osteophyte protruion using conventional grading methods. Measurement of the minimum anteroposterior diameter of the cervical spinal canal, the anteroposterior diameters of the cervical vertebral bodies, and the ratio of intervertebral disc height to adjacent vertebral body height in the cervical spine, however, showed a consistent trend to smaller measurements in the carpal tunnel group. Differences were significant at several vertebral levels in each of these dimensions. The narrowing of the intervertebral discs relative to the vertebral bodies in patients with carpal tunnel syndrome may indicate connective tissue changes, which might also occur in the common extensor origin at the elbow or in the contents of the carpal tunnel.  相似文献   

5.
Although occipitocervical fusion is frequently used for instability of the upper cervical spine and the occipitocervical articulation, most currently used techniques have one or more of the following disadvantages: the necessity for sublaminar wires, the use of occipital screws, a fixed angle of instrumentation, or the necessity for routine postoperative halo immobilization. Moreover, many reported techniques are associated with a high rate of nonunion or instrumentation failure. We present our experience with a technically simple method of obtaining rigid occipitocervical arthrodesis using a 5-mm malleable rod that is fixed to the skull by a pair of wires passed through four suboccipital burr holes. Segmental spinal fixation is achieved with Wisconsin interspinous wires and is occasionally supplemented with sublaminar wires. Supplemental autogenous bone graft is used in all cases. A cervical collar is routinely used for postoperative immobilization. The results of treatment were retrospectively reviewed in 16 patients with an average age of 49.4 years (range, 9-69). Mean follow-up was 24 months (range, 12-36 mo). The indication for fusion was instability of the occiput-C1-C2 complex as a result of Chiari malformation, rheumatoid disease, skull base tumor resection, basilar invagination, ankylosing spondylitis, Down's syndrome, cervical laminectomy, and trauma. The average number of levels fused was 5.4 (range, O-C3 to O-T3). Successful occipitocervical arthrodesis was achieved in all but one of the surviving patients. The single patient with a pseudarthrosis was successfully managed with supplemental bone grafting and halo immobilization. There were two deaths from medical complications in chronically ill patients. Other complications included one postoperative instrumentation loosening, one myocardial infarction, and one superficial occipital decubitus. In conclusion, rodding and segmental interspinous wiring is an effective, technically simple method of obtaining rigid occipitocervical fixation, which obviates the need for bulky orthoses.  相似文献   

6.
J Lu  NA Ebraheim  H Yang  BE Heck  RA Yeasting 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1998,23(11):1229-35; discussion 1236
STUDY DESIGN: Anatomic parameters of C1 and C2 were measured in 30 dried human cervical spines. Anterior transarticular C1-C2 screws were placed in 15 cadaveric spines. OBJECTIVE: To provide anatomic data for anterior transarticular atlantoaxial screw or C1-C2 screw and plate fixation. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: A posterior approach to fixation in the atlantoaxial joint has been well described. Damage to the vertebral artery is documented as a rare complication of posterior atlantoaxial transarticular screw fixation. An anterior surgical approach to exposing the upper cervical spine for internal fixation and bone graft recently has been developed. No anatomic information regarding the anterior transarticular atlantoaxial screw or screw and plate fixation between C1 and C2 is available in the literature. METHODS: Direct measurements using digital calipers and a goniometer were taken from 30 pairs of dried human C1 and C2 vertebrae. The anterior transarticular C1-C2 screw insertion point is at the junction of the lateral edge of the C2 vertebral body to 4 mm above the inferior edge of the C2 anterior arch. The parameters related to anterior transarticular atlantoaxial screw fixation or screw and plate fixation between the C1 lateral mass and the C2 vertebral body were measured. Fifteen embalmed cadavers were used for anterior C1-C2 transarticular screw placement. Longer screws (30-40 mm) were used to detect whether the screw tips violated the upper cervical canal or vertebral arteries. RESULTS: In the anterior transarticular atlantoaxial screw placement, lateral angulation of the screw placement relative to sagittal plane ranged from 4.8 +/- 1.8 degrees to 25.3 +/- 2.6 degrees. The posterior angulation of the screw placement relative to the coronal plane ranged from 12.8 +/- 3.1 degrees to 22.6 +/- 3.2 degrees. The length of the medial screw path ranged from 14.7 +/- 1.5 mm to 25.4 +/- 2.8 mm. In the anterior screw and plate fixation, the anteroposterior diameter of the inferior facet articular surface ranged from 16.2 +/- 1.6 mm to 17.1 +/- 1.8 mm. The anteroposterior diameter of the C2 vertebral body ranged from 9.3 +/- 1 mm to 16.2 +/- 1.8 mm. The anterior prevascular retropharyngeal approach appropriately exposed the atlantoaxial joint for anterior transarticular C1-C2 screw placement. No screws violated the vertebral artery and cervical canal. CONCLUSIONS: An anterior transarticular atlantoaxial screw 15-25 mm long can be inserted with a lateral angulation of 5-25 degrees relative to the sagittal plane and a posterior angulation of 10-25 degrees relative to the coronal plane. Additionally, in C1-C2 anterior plate fixation screws 15 mm long could be anchored in the inferior facet of the C1, and screws 9-15 mm long could be anchored in the C2 vertebral body.  相似文献   

7.
SC Robertson  AH Menezes 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1998,23(2):249-54; discussion 254-5
STUDY DESIGN: Dorsal occipitocervical fusion is associated with a high rate of fusion failure and requires an additional surgical site for donor bone graft harvesting. In this series, an autologous occipital calvarial bone graft obtained from the same occipitocervical incision with contoured metal loops was used in 25 adults to achieve craniovertebral stabilization and fusion. OBJECTIVES: To study the use of autologous occipital calvarial bone grafts in occipitocervical fusion. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Cranial bone grafts have been used successfully in craniofacial reconstruction with good long-term results. In the plastic surgery literature, there are claims that membranous bone grafts are superior to endochondral bone grafts in fusions because of decreased resorption. In recent studies, results have shown successful use of calvarial bone in fusing the upper cervical spine in children. The use of autologous occipital bone in posterior occipitocervical fusions avoids many of the problems associated with traditional donor sites and provides a sufficient quantity of good quality bone for the fusion. This is especially true in the fragile rheumatoid arthritis patient with cranial cervical instability. METHOD: Split-thickness, autologous calvarial bone grafts with contoured loop and cable instrumentation were used for posterior occipitocervical stabilization and fusion in 25 patients, most of whom had rheumatoid arthritis. The calvarial bone graft was harvested from the occipital skull, using a microair impactor, and was secured next to the loop construct. After surgery, all patients were immobilized with external orthoses. RESULTS: None of the patients had hardware failure or complications from the occipital graft procurement. In 22 patients, good alignment, stability, and bony fusion were shown on radiographs. CONCLUSIONS: Occipital calvarial bone graft appears to work as well as other autologous corticocancellous bone grafts routinely used in posterior occipitocervical fusions.  相似文献   

8.
Degenerative changes of the cervical spine include changes of the bony and discoligamentous structures that can create mechanical alterations of the anatomy. Compressive syndromes and deformation or instability represent basic indications for surgery. In the upper cervical spine, osteoarthritis of the C1-C2 facet manifests with suboccipital pain syndrome caused by generally unilateral degenerative changes of the atlantoaxial facet. Fixation and atlantoaxial fusion represent the treatment of choice. In rare instances the presence of os odontoideum is responsible for atlantoaxial instability. Narrowing of the lateral recess in the subaxial spine produces radicular symptoms. The clinical symptoms should be supported with imaging methods such as computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging. Selective decompression produces satisfactory results. Spondylotic cervical myelopathy requires the addition of neurophysiologic investigations. Posterior decompression with laminoplasty or anterior decompression procedures with corpectomy of the involved segments represent therapeutic options with comparable results. In the presence of axial neck pain, the exact location of the painful segment challenges clinicians and radiologists. Only in cases in which the clinical findings correlate with the radiologic changes should surgical fusion be considered as a last therapeutic means to resolve the painful condition.  相似文献   

9.
SJ Weller  AM Malek  E Rossitch 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1997,47(3):274-80; discussion 280-1
BACKGROUND: Cervical spine fractures in the elderly are relatively common. The management of such injuries may be complicated by underlying medical debility and osteopenia as well as reduced tolerance to halo immobilization. METHODS: Over a 1-year period, 43 cervical spine fractures were treated at our institution. Ten (23%) were in persons 70 years of age or older. This retrospective analysis describe the clinical features, treatment, and outcome of these 10 elderly patients. All fractures in this patient population involved the atlantoaxial complex, including five combination C1-C2 fractures. Six patients were treated with early halo immobilization and three were initially managed with a rigid cervical collar. Three patients required posterior cervical fusion. RESULTS: Of the six patients undergoing halo immobilization, five progressed to osseous union. Three patients were immobilized in a Philadelphia collar resulting in one osseous union, one nonunion, and one death. Three patients underwent posterior cervical fusion with subsequent osseous union in all three. CONCLUSIONS: Although external immobilization with a halo device is our treatment of choice for most C1 and C2 fractures in elderly patients, a Philadelphia collar is useful in select cases when halo immobilization or early surgical fusion is contraindicated. Posterior cervical fusion can be safely and effectively performed in elderly patients and should be strongly considered for initial therapy in the elderly with fracture types unlikely to progress to osseous union with external immobilization alone.  相似文献   

10.
The authors describe their experience with the Morscher titanium cervical plate with cancellous locking screws in the management of complex cervical spine disorders. Fifty patients (32 males and 18 females) with a mean age of 54 years (range 10 to 84 years) underwent anterior spinal fixation that extended two to five vertebral bodies, using a titanium cervical plate and autogenous bone graft. Surgeries were performed for a variety of reasons: one for a congenital lesion, five for spinal neoplasms, nine for trauma, and 35 for degenerative arthritides. Ten patients had symptomatic kyphoses due to previous laminectomy, failed anterior surgery, or trauma. Satisfactory fixation and fusion with no neurological deterioration was obtained in all but two cases. Specific complications included six cases of dysphagia, one of sepsis, one of Horner's syndrome, and one case in which the patient had a fatal myocardial infarction the night after surgery. At the end of the follow-up period, fusion was found to have occurred in all remaining cases with no outstanding implant-related problems.  相似文献   

11.
V Heidecke  NG Rainov  W Burkert 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1998,23(16):1796-802; discussion 1803
STUDY DESIGN: This study was conducted to evaluate an anterior cervical fusion plate system, the Orion locking plate, regarding its surgical handling, hardware-related failures, and short-term and long-term results. OBJECTIVES: A comprehensive evaluation of the implant in a broad range of patients with cervical spine diseases. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Locking plates are the most recent devices for achieving anterior cervical spinal fusion and offer considerable advantages such as faster and easier implantation and fewer implant-related failures than older plate systems. METHODS: Ninety-six patients were investigated. All underwent anterior cervical plate fusion as a component of the surgical treatment for symptomatic degenerative cervical spinal disease or for vertebral destruction caused by trauma, tumor, or inflammation. Besides plate fixation, 6 of the 96 patients had a combined ventrodorsal fusion. In 28 cases, one or more vertebral bodies were removed and replaced with titanium place-holders. The remaining 62 patients were first treated by intervertebral inlay placement, and the fused segments were subsequently plated. Neurologic signs and symptoms were evaluated before and after surgery and during a follow-up period of at least 1 year. RESULTS: The rate of neurologic improvement was highest in radiculopathy patients and lowest in patients with severe myelopathy. In all cases, control radiographs demonstrated a solid bony fusion. Clinical deterioration after surgery was seen in four cases of severe myelopathy in which considerable neurologic deficits existed before surgery, possible because of rapid decompression of the cord and associated microvascular alterations. In two of these cases, there was long-term improvement. Additional general complications caused by surgical retraction included temporary swallowing disturbance in seven patients and a large wound hematoma in one. Hardware failures were encountered in three cases, all of them caused by improper implantation technique and not material failure, per se. CONCLUSION: In the study group, the Orion locking plate was easy to use, failure-free if properly implanted, safe for the patient and supported solid bony fusion in every case.  相似文献   

12.
STUDY DESIGN: The cervical spine of the healthy Japanese children aged between 1 year and 18 years was radiographically examined. OBJECTIVES: To examine the correlation between growth of the cervical vertebral body and the facet joint and the development of the cervical lordosis and intervertebral motion. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Although the growth of body height and facet angle have been well documented, their correlation with curvature or mobility has not been elucidated. METHODS: We evaluated plain lateral radiographs of 180 boys and 180 girls regarding diameters and central heights of the cervical vertebra, the anterior and posterior vertebral height ratio, body height index, the facet joint angles, and tilting and sliding motions. Cervical length as the summation of the central height from C3 to C7 and the cervical lordosis angle (C3-C7 angle) were also measured. RESULTS: The mean C3-C7 angle and body height index gradually decreased until 9 years of age and then increased. The C3-C7 angle showed a significant correlation with cervical length, body height index, and facet joint angles before 9 years of age, and with cervical length and body height index after 9 years of age but not with facet joint angles. Facet joint angle decreased until 10 years of age and remained almost unchanged thereafter. Total sliding showed a significant age-related decrease and showed a significant correlation with facet joint angle. CONCLUSION: Although the lordosis angle showed a significant correlation with the other values, cervical length, body height index, and facet joint angle, the determinants of the lordosis could not be elucidate in the present study. As for the mobility of the cervical spine, changes of tilting motion were small, whereas changes of sliding motion were restricted by the change of orientation of the facet joints.  相似文献   

13.
STUDY DESIGN: This study analyzed the precise two-dimensional location of the vertebral artery within cervical vertebrae as determined by measurements obtained from axial computed tomographic images of the cervical spine. OBJECTIVE: To determine the margin of safety necessary to avoid vertebral artery laceration during central decompression and lateral nerve root decompression for cervical spinal stenosis. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Laceration of the vertebral artery is a rare but potentially catastrophic complication of anterior decompressive surgery of the cervical spine. METHODS: The mean, standard deviation, and 95% confidence interval of the mean of measurements localizing the vertebral artery within the vertebral body were calculated from 50 transaxial computed tomography images of each of the second through sixth cervical vertebrae. RESULTS: Both the mean interforaminal distance (from 25.90 +/- 1.89 mm at C3 to 29.30 +/- 2.70 mm at C6) and the average distance of the posterior border of the foramen transversarium from the ventral border of the spinal canal (from 2.16 +/- 1.18 mm at C3 to 3.53 +/- 1.56 mm at C6) increased from C3 to C6. CONCLUSIONS: According to our measurements, the risk of vertebral artery laceration is greater at more cephalad vertebrae during lateral extension of central decompressive procedures and lateral nerve root decompression. Because of the variability of these parameters between individuals, accurate individual preoperative localization of the vertebral arteries is recommended.  相似文献   

14.
STUDY DESIGN: A case is reported in which a flexion-induced compression of the upper cervical spinal cord caused symptoms of brainstem compromise in the absence of radiographic evidence of osseous instability. OBJECTIVES: A 41-year-old woman developed postoperative cervical instability with flexion-induced neurologic symptoms referable to the brainstem. The instability was caused by direct compression at the third cervical vertebral body, which in turn was caused by differential movements between the neuraxis and skeletal elements in the upper cervical spine. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Pathologic processes at the craniocervical junction may cause brainstem compromise with neurologic symptoms. The mechanism of brainstem involvement is usually either vertebrobasilar insufficiency or direct mechanical compression. In cases where the brainstem is compressed by skeletal elements, the compressing osseous structures usually are the walls of the foramen magnum or the odontoid process, or, less frequently, the atlas or axis vertebrae. Symptoms of brainstem dysfunction caused by dynamic compression at the level of the third cervical vertebra in the absence of hindbrain herniation are unusual and, to the best of the authors' knowledge, have not been described previously. METHODS: The patient underwent initial examination, evaluation, and periodic follow-up examination with magnetic resonance imaging from the time of her first visit until 26 months after the surgical treatment. The patient experienced postsurgical instability with dynamic compression by the C3 vertebral body, which caused brainstem compromise. Surgical treatment consisted of decompressive C3 corpectomy and fusion of C2 to C6, supplemented by anterior fixation. RESULTS: After undergoing surgical decompression of C3, reconstruction, and anterior internal fixation of C2 to C6, the patient had dramatic neurologic improvement. Diplopia, paresthesia, and nystagmus disappeared immediately after surgery. Swallowing difficulties, hoarseness, and vertigo improved gradually. At follow-up examination 26 months after surgery, the patient was asymptomatic. Magnetic resonance imaging showed good position of the construct, with no evidence of compression of the spinal cord or brainstem. CONCLUSIONS: Instability of the cervical spine may result in symptoms of brainstem dysfunction, even in the absence of hindbrain herniation. This instability is explained by the differential movement between the bony structures and neuraxis in the upper cervical region. Diagnosis and adequate management of this instability alleviates the neurologic symptoms and prevents possible hazardous complications.  相似文献   

15.
K Kaneda  Y Shono  S Satoh  K Abumi 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1996,21(10):1250-61; discussion 1261-2
STUDY DESIGN: The Kaneda multisegmental instrumentation is a new anterior two-rod system for the correction of thoracolumbar and lumbar spine deformities. This system consists of a vertebral plate and two vertebral screws for individual vertebral bodies and two semirigid rods to interconnect the vertebral screws. Clinical results of 25 thoracolumbar and lumbar scoliosis patients treated with this new instrumentation were analyzed. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the efficacy of the new anterior instrumentation in correction and stabilization of thoracolumbar and lumbar scoliosis. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Since Dwyer first introduced the concept of anterior spinal instrumentation and fusion for scoliosis, anterior surgery has gradually gained acceptance. In 1976, a useful modification for the anterior spinal instrumentation, which reportedly provided means of lordosation and vertebral body derotation, was described. However, some authors reported a high tendency of the implant breakage, loss of correction, progression of the kyphosis, and pseudoarthrosis as the major complications. To overcome the disadvantages of Zielke instrumentation, the authors have developed a new anterior spinal instrumentation (two-rod system) for the management of thoracolumbar and lumbar scoliosis. METHODS: Anterior correction and fusion using Kaneda multisegmental instrumentation was performed in 25 patients with thoracolumbar or lumbar scoliosis. The average follow-up period was 3 years, 1 month (range, 2 years to 4 years, 7 months). There were 20 patients with idiopathic scoliosis (13 adolescents and seven adults) and five patients with other types of scoliosis, including congenital and other etiologies. All patients had correction of scoliosis by fusion within the major curve, and for 16 of the 25 patients, the most distal end vertebra was not included in the fusion (short fusion). Radiographic evaluations were performed to analyze frontal and sagittal alignments of the spine. RESULTS: The average correction rate of scoliosis was 83%. Over the instrumented levels, the correction rate was 90%. Preoperative kyphosis of the instrumented levels of 7 degrees was corrected to 9 degrees of lordosis. Sagittal lordosis of the lumbosacral area beneath the fused segments averaged 51 degrees before surgery and was reduced to 34 degrees after surgery. The trunk shift was improved from 25 mm before surgery to 4 mm at final follow-up evaluation. The average improvement in the lower end vertebra tilt-angle was 97% in those patients whose lower end vertebra was included in the fusion and 83% in patients whose lower end vertebra was not included in the fusion. Apical vertebral rotation showed an average correction rate of 86%. At final follow-up evaluation, all patients demonstrated solid fusion without implant-related complications. There was 1.5 degrees of frontal plane and 1.5 degrees of sagittal plane correction loss within the instrumented area at final follow-up evaluation. CONCLUSIONS: New anterior two-rod system showed excellent correction of the frontal curvature and sagittal alignment with extremely high correction capability of rotational deformities. Furthermore, correction of thoracolumbar kyphosis to physiologic lordosis was achieved. This system provides flexibility of the implant for smooth application to the deformed spine and overall rigidity to correct the deformity and maintain the fixation without a significant loss of correction or implant failure compared with conventional one-rod instrumentation systems in anterior scoliosis correction.  相似文献   

16.
Counterflow centrifugal elutriation: present and future   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Only single cases with rheumatoid arthritis of the thoracic spine with vertebral subluxation have been reported to date. In a review of 100 patients with severe rheumatoid arthritis who had undergone occipitocervical fusion, arthritis of the upper thoracic spine with subluxation was discovered on conventional radiographs in four patients. Two additional patients were found elsewhere. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was performed in three of the patients, confirming the diagnosis of subluxation of the upper thoracic vertebrae. In addition, MRI revealed encroachment on the anterior subarachnoid space and compression of the spinal cord.  相似文献   

17.
BACKGROUND: Spinal instrumentation has become an increasing part of the armamentarium of neurosurgery and neurosurgical training. For noncontroversial indications for spine fusion the arthrodesis rate seems to be better. For both noncontroversial and controversial indications, the reported complication rate with spinal instrumentation tends to be greater than that with noninstrumented spine surgeries. These reported complications include a 2-3% neurologic injury rate, 3-45% reoperation rate for implant failure, and inflection rates of 5-10%. Therefore, we report on 299 cases that have undergone spinal instrumentation placed exclusively by neurosurgeons with a very low complication rate. METHODS: Two hundred ninety-nine consecutive spinal instrumentation cases performed exclusively by neurosurgeons at Indiana University Medical Center were analyzed for complications related to spinal instrumentation. The spinal instrumentation placed consisted of 195 anterior cervical locking plates, 22 cases of posterior cervical instrumentation, 9 cases of combined anterior locking plates with posterior cervical instrumentation, 14 anterior thoracolumbar plates, 51 posterior thoraco-lumbar instrumentation cases, and 8 combined anterior/posterior thoracolumbar instrumentation cases. RESULTS: The mean follow-up is 40 months (6-95). There was one perioperative death unrelated to the spinal instrumentation. There were no neurologic injuries and there has been no hardware infection to date. There were two dural tears, three superficial wound infections, and three minor wound breakdowns successfully treated. Hardware complications included three cervical plate/screw extrusions reoperated, one cervical plate fracture reoperated, one posterior cervical screw backout not reoperated, one case of broken pedicle screw not reoperated, one vertebral body failure not reoperated, and one posterior rod case reoperated for excessive rod length and protrusion. The overall complication rate attributable to placement of spinal instrumentation was 10/299 (3%) with a reoperation rate of 2%. The arthrodesis rate was 298/299 (99%). CONCLUSION: The complication rate for using spinal instrumentation can be less than previously reported. Lessons learned and discussed should reduce the rate even more. Spinal instrumentation is a safe and useful adjunct to fusion in treating degenerative, traumatic, infectious, and neoplastic diseases of the spine.  相似文献   

18.
STUDY DESIGN: A patient with a medical history of Sweet's Syndrome, an acute neutrophilic dermatosis, was seen at the authors' institution for cervical pain. After undergoing a thorough history-taking and physical examination and after experiencing no relief with conservative therapy, the patient underwent cervical spine surgery. After the surgical procedure, the patient developed multiple cutaneous lesions that were consistent with the findings associated with an acute recurrence of Sweet's Syndrome. OBJECTIVES: To characterize the authors' experience with this unusual histologically documented dermatologic disorder. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: Sweet's Syndrome is a rare form of neutrophilic dermatosis characterized by recurrent eruptions of painful, edematous, red, tender plaques that are found predominantly on the torso in middle-aged women. After an extensive literature search, it was noted that this rare and unusual disorder has not been reported previously in association with surgical intervention of any type, including spinal operations. METHODS: The patient's postoperative course was documented, and all medical records were reviewed retrospectively. RESULTS: The patient's rash resolved spontaneously. Solid fusion of C5-C6 occurred. The patient remained neurovascularly intact, and her axial cervical pain decreased significantly from its preoperative levels. CONCLUSIONS: Sweet's Syndrome remains a rare dermatologic disorder, which may complicate a routine postoperative course. Patients with Sweet's Syndrome have an exceedingly high rate of other serious medical illness. The effect of Sweet's Syndrome on physiologic bone healing is unknown. In this patient, there was nonunion of the cervical spine, with eventual solid bony union. Perioperatively, patients with this disorder are treated with oral prednisone and oral antibiotics to prevent secondary complications at the surgical wound.  相似文献   

19.
PURPOSE OF THE STUDY: The goal of this study was to precise indications and surgical techniques for stabilisation with or without decompression of the upper cervical spine instability in rheumatoid arthritis. MATERIAL AND METHODS: 28 patients presenting upper cervical spine disease have been reviewed (mean age 57 years). These patients had been suffering from severe diffuse arthritis during an average of 14.5 years. The anterior atlanto-axial dislocation was most frequent (25 times), 1 posterior dislocation and 2 vertical dislocations. Odontoid lysis was noted 19 times. A subluxation of the lower cervical spine was present in 12 patients. SURGICAL TECHNIQUE: C1-C2 arthrodesis was performed 12 times (9 times with a loop wire and 3 isthmo-pedicular screws C2-C1), occipito-cervical arthrodesis with plates 16 times. Operative traction was necessary 5 times. The associated surgical gestures included 3 times a laminectomy, 2 times an enlargement of the occipital foramen, 1 section of the Arnold nerve. In 2 patients was associated a fixation of the lower cervical spine. RESULTS: With an average of 27 months follow-up, functional results (classified according to Ranawat's criteria) were satisfactory in 14 patients, improved in 7 patients, unchanged in 4 and bad in 3. The reduction of the anterior displacement in 25 patients was complete 11 times, partial 17 times and null 3 times. The reduction of the vertical displacement was complete once, partial 3 times. Arthrodesis fusion was obtained in 19 cases, 5 times it was a fibrous union and 4 pseudarthrosis occurred, all with C1-C2 loop wire. The rate of complications was high: 2 infections on bone site grafting requiring reoperation, 2 infections with secondary septicemia after lack of reduction. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: Occipito-cervical arthrodesis is necessary as soon as the patient presents neurological signs. When there is an anterior dislocation associated with vertical dislocation, if there is posterior dislocation in case of osteoporosis of the posterior C1-C2 arc, or destabilisation of the lower cervical spine. C1-C2 arthrodesis is suggested when there is no important neurological signs, when displacement is limited to a pure anterior dislocation and in young patient with good bone quality.  相似文献   

20.
STUDY DESIGN: Comparison of findings in plain radiography and conventional tomography with findings in plain radiography and magnetic resonance imaging of the upper cervical spine in consecutive patients with rheumatoid arthritis and with known or suspected abnormalities of the cervical spine. OBJECTIVES: To determine whether plain radiography and magnetic resonance imaging provide enough information to dispense with tomography in investigations of cervical spine involvement in rheumatoid arthritis. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: With the recent advances in magnetic resonance imaging technology and the proliferation of magnetic resonance imaging techniques for specific clinical conditions. METHODS: Twenty-eight patients with rheumatoid arthritis and with known or suspected abnormalities of the cervical spine underwent a clinical neurologic examination; plain radiography, including full flexion lateral radiography; anteroposterior and lateral tomography at C1-C2; and magnetic resonance imaging at the same level in neutral position and in flexion. Two radiologists evaluated one image set consisting of plain radiography and conventional tomographic images and another image set consisting of plain radiography and magnetic resonance images, for each patient. RESULTS: Compared with conventional tomography and plain radiography, magnetic resonance imaging and plain radiography showed cystic lesions and erosions of the odontoid process and vertical atlantoaxial subluxation more often, showed anterior subluxation as often, and showed lateral atlantoaxial subluxation less often. CONCLUSION: Magnetic resonance imaging produces sufficiently distinct images of destruction of the odontoid and subluxations for it to replace conventional tomography in investigations of upper cervical spine involvement in rheumatoid arthritis.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号