Surgical correction of post-traumatic kyphosis of thoracolumbar spine.
- Author:
Zhong-Qiang CHEN
1
;
Wei-Shi LI
;
Zhao-Qing GUO
;
Qiang QI
;
Geng-Ting DANG
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: Adolescent; Bone Transplantation; Child; Female; Humans; Kyphosis; etiology; surgery; Lumbar Vertebrae; injuries; surgery; Male; Middle Aged; Osteotomy; methods; Retrospective Studies; Spinal Fractures; complications; surgery; Spinal Fusion; Thoracic Vertebrae; injuries; surgery; Treatment Outcome
- From: Chinese Journal of Surgery 2005;43(4):201-204
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo determine the effectiveness of surgical correction for post-traumatic kyphosis of thoracolumbar spine.
METHODSFrom 1996 to 2003, 33 consecutive patients with post-traumatic kyphosis of thoracolumbar spine were corrected surgically. The mean age was 40.3 years (range, 13 - 65 years). The mean time between the initial injury and surgical correction was 36.0 months (range, 6 - 220 months). The kyphotic deformity averaged 40.8 degrees (range, 20 degrees - 82 degrees ). All the patients had neurological deficits. Twelve patients had obvious back pain. Seven patients lost sphincter function completely and nineteen patients lost the function partly. Twenty-three patients had ever undergone laminectomy and/or instrumentation. The treatment procedure consisted of anterior release and posterior spinal osteotomy with instrumentation (15 patients), posterior closing wedge osteotomy with instrumentation (12 patients), anterior release and instrumentation (6 patients).
RESULTSKyphosis was corrected from an average of 40.8 degrees to an average of 5.7 degrees, the corrective rate was 86.0% (40.8 degrees - 5.7 degrees /40.8 degrees). There were no severe complications. The average follow-up period was 24.6 months (range, 6 - 84 months). There was no loss of correction at follow-up. Ten of these patients showed an improvement in neural function by one or two levels according to the classification. Sphincter function recovered partly in ten patients. Back pain was relieved significantly in all of twelve patients with back pain preoperatively. Bony fusion was achieved in thirty-two patients. One patient had nonunion and achieved bony fusion after revision.
CONCLUSIONPosterior closing wedge osteotomy was suitable to kyphosis less than 40 degrees. Anterior release and posterior spinal osteotomy was effective, especially to the patients with severe kyphosis deformity or with operation history. Patients with incomplete neurological deficits and/or severe back pain could get benefit from osteotomy of spine, even if their medical history was long.