Operative treatment of isthmic spondylolisthesis in children: a long-term, retrospective comparative study with matched cohorts

被引:0
作者
Tuomas Jalanko
Ilkka Helenius
Ville Remes
Tommi Lamberg
Pekka Tervahartiala
Timo Yrjönen
Mikko Poussa
Dietrich Schlenzka
机构
[1] ORTON Orthopaedic Hospital,Turku Children’s Hospital
[2] Invalid Foundation,Peijas Hospital
[3] Turku University Central Hospital,Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatology
[4] Helsinki University Central Hospital,undefined
[5] Helsinki University Central Hospital,undefined
[6] HUS-Röntgen,undefined
[7] Helsinki University Central Hospital,undefined
来源
European Spine Journal | 2011年 / 20卷
关键词
Spondylolisthesis; Surgery; Children; Adolescents; Comparative study;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The purpose of the present study was to compare the long-term clinical, functional and radiographic outcomes of young patients operated on before or at the onset of puberty (Children) and those operated on after that (Adolescents). The study group consisted of 298 patients operated on under the age of 20 years; 55 of them were operated on before or at the onset of growth spurt (29 females <12.5 years, 26 males <14.5 years). Preoperative data were retrieved from patients’ records. After mean follow-up of 17 years (10.7–26.3), physical examination, radiographic measurements and functional testing were performed by independent observers. SRS-24, Oswestry Disability Index (ODI), and Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) were utilised to evaluate health-related quality of life. The data were compared between the two age groups in the whole study population and in 41 pairs of patients matched by gender, operative method, severity of preoperative slip, and age at follow-up. Preoperatively, one-third of children did not have significant pain symptoms. They were operated upon for resistant postural anomalies in combination with high risk of slip progression. All of the adolescents had low-back pain as the main clinical symptom. The outcomes were satisfactory in both groups in the whole population (children vs. adolescents; low-grade slip: SRS-24: 95.9 vs. 92.0, ODI: 5.2 vs. 7.5, VAS low-back pain: 18.9 vs. 21.2; high-grade slip: SRS-24: 95.6 vs. 90.6, ODI: 3.4 vs. 6.9, VAS low-back pain: 10.5 vs. 22.1). The differences were statistically significant for ODI and VAS in high-grade patients in favor of the children. The clinical relevance of these differences seems to be minimal. The results of the comparison of the matched cohorts were comparably good. One-fifth of the whole study group had a non-union which did not affect the final outcome. In the children with high-grade slips, there was a mean slip improvement of 14 percentage points due to remodelling. The overall complication rate in the whole population was 7.7%. In conclusion, spinal fusion can be carried out at an early age for low- and high-grade spondylolisthesis with good long-term clinical, functional, radiographic and health-related quality-of-life outcomes when the indications are met.
引用
收藏
页码:766 / 775
页数:9
相关论文
共 75 条
[1]  
Alaranta H(1994)Flexibility of the spine: normative values of goniometric and tape measurements Scand J Rehab Med 26 147-154
[2]  
Hurri H(1994)Non-dynamometric trunk performance tests: reliability and normative data Scand J Rehab Med 26 211-212
[3]  
Heliövaara M(1956)Spondyloschisis and spondylolisthesis in children J Bone Joint Surg 38 933-34
[4]  
Alaranta H(1988)Brace treatment for symptomatic spondylolisthesis Clin Orthop 236 192-198
[5]  
Hurri H(2004)Spondylolisthesis in pre-school children J Pediatr Orthop B 13 225-230
[6]  
Heliövaara M(1979)Management of severe spondylolisthesis in children and adolescents J Bone Joint Surg Am 61 479-495
[7]  
Baker DR(1997)Treatment of spondylolysis and spondylolisthesis in children and adolescents Clin Orthop 337 77-85
[8]  
McHolick W(1980)The Oswestry low back pain disability questionnaire Physiotherapy 66 271-273
[9]  
Bell D(1984)The natural history of spondylolysis and spondylolisthesis J Bone Joint Surg 66-A 699-707
[10]  
Ehrlich M(1999)Results of the Scoliosis Research Society Instrument for evaluation of surgical outcome in adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. A multicenter study of 244 patients Spine 24 1435-1440