Successful Treatment of Thoracolumbar Fractures With Short-segment Pedicle Instrumentation

被引:70
作者
Gelb, Daniel [1 ]
Ludwig, Steven [1 ]
Karp, Jacqueline E. [1 ]
Chung, Edward H. [1 ]
Werner, Clement [1 ]
Kim, Terrence [1 ]
Poelstra, Kornelis [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Maryland, Dept Orthopaed, Med Ctr, Baltimore, MD 21201 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF SPINAL DISORDERS & TECHNIQUES | 2010年 / 23卷 / 05期
关键词
thoracolumbar fractures; short-segment pedicle instrumentation; Load Sharing Classification of Spine Fracture; AO Classification of Fractures; multiple traumatic injuries; LUMBAR BURST FRACTURES; UNSTABLE THORACOLUMBAR; SPINE FRACTURES; BALLOON KYPHOPLASTY; POSTERIOR FIXATION; CALCIUM-PHOSPHATE; FIXATEUR-INTERNE; STABILIZATION; FUSION;
D O I
10.1097/BSD.0b013e3181af20b6
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Study Design: Retrospective radiographic review. Objective: To determine whether clinical factors or common classification systems can predict the radiologic outcome of short-segment thoracolumbar fracture fixation. Summary of Background Data: Previous reports have indicated that short-segment thoracolumbar fracture fixation might not be appropriate for highly comminuted fractures or for patients with multiple traumatic injuries. Methods: We conducted a retrospective radiographic review of 46 thoracolumbar fractures treated with short-segment posterior instrumentation to determine the rate of correction loss and instrumentation failure in relation to the Load Sharing Classification of Spine Fracture system and the AO Classification of Fractures system. No postoperative bracing was used. Patients with multisystem organ trauma and those with isolated injuries were included. Results: An average loss of correction of 7.5 degree was observed. Pedicle screw placement into the fractured vertebra seemed to protect against correction loss: 4 of the 7 patients (57%) in the no intermediate fixation group had > 10 degree loss of correction. No relationship was shown between loss of correction and Load Sharing Classification (<= 6 or >= 7 points), loss of correction and AO Classification, or loss of correction and level of injury (thoracolumbar junction vs. lower lumbar). Conclusions: With modern instrumentation and techniques, short-segment thoracolumbar fracture fixation could be used successfully, despite highly comminuted injuries, without anterior column support or supplemental bracing.
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页码:293 / 301
页数:9
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