1.Diagnosis and treatment of cervical spine hyperextension injury plus multilevel intervertebral discoligamentous complex injury
Wei CHEN ; Zhida CHEN ; Bin LIN ; Taoyi CAI ; Yuzhe ZENG ; Zhenqi DING ; Zhangjian YU ; Zhuanzhi HUANG
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma 2024;26(11):978-984
Objective:To investigate the clinical and imaging characteristics of cervical spine hyperextension injury plus multilevel disco-ligamentous complex (MDLC) injury and the therapeutic effectiveness of their treatment.Methods:A total of 456 patients with cervical hyperextension injury were hospitalized between January 2010 and October 2020 at Department of Orthopaedics, The 909th Hospital, Dongnan Hospital Affiliated to Xiamen University. A retrospective study was conducted to analyze the clinical data of the 43 patients among them who had been diagnosed with MDLC injury and undergone surgical treatment and been fully followed up. They were 37 males and 6 females with an age of (50.6±10.7) years. According to the American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) grading, there were 1 case of grade A, 8 cases of grade B, 18 cases of grade C, and 16 cases of grade D. The Japanese Orthopaedic Association (JOA) score was (7.9±1.6) points. Anterior cervical decompression, fusion and internal fixation were conducted for 42 patients, and posterior total laminectomy and internal fixation for 1 patient. The clinical and imaging manifestations of the patients, and the consistency between preoperative and intraoperative diagnosis of disco-ligamentous complex (DLC) injury were analyzed. ASIA grading and JOA score were used to assess the outcomes of surgical treatment and comparisons were made between preoperation and postoperation.Results:DLC injury existed at 99 levels (43 cases), with a high incidence at level C 5-6 (30 cases), and high-signal manifestations of cervical cord injury existed at 48 levels, with a high incidence at level C 3-4 (16 cases). Two-segment DLC injury was the most common [74.4% (32/43)], while three-segment DLC injury existed in 9 cases and four-segment DLC injury in 2 cases. There were 21 cases of jumping MDLC injury and 22 cases of continuous MDLC injury. At preoperation, DLC injury was suspected in 10 patients (at 11 levels), of whom 8 (at 9 levels) were diagnosed intraoperatively with DLC injury, and 2 (at 2 levels) were excluded from the DLC injury. All the 43 patients were followed up for (54.7±10.7) months. By the ASIA grading at the last follow-up, 3 cases were grade C, 13 cases grade D, and 27 cases grade E. The JOA score at the last follow-up was (15.1±2.2) points. Both the 2 outcomes showed significant improvements compared with the preoperative values ( P<0.05). Conclusions:The clinical incidence of cervical hyperextension injury combined with MDLC injury is low, but relatively higher in the middle-aged and elderly patients. As the level of DLC injury is often inconsistent with the likely level of cervical spinal cord injury, surgical exploration of the DLC structure with suspected injury can reduce the rate of missed diagnosis and misdiagnosis.
2.The indications, efficacy and safety of endoscopic treatment of upper urinary tract urothelial carcinoma
Boxing SU ; Bo XIAO ; Weiguo HU ; Yuzhe TANG ; Meng FU ; Yubao LIU ; Xue ZENG ; Jianxing LI
Chinese Journal of Urology 2021;42(12):901-905
Objective:To summarize the preliminary clinical experience of endoscopic treatment of upper urinary tract urothelial carcinoma, and to analyze its indications and efficacy.Methods:The clinical data of 14 patients underwent endoscopic treatment for upper urinary tract urothelial carcinoma in our hospital from December 2014 to December 2019 were retrospectively analyzed. Among them, there were 5 males and 9 females, with a median age of 75.5(44-84) years. There were 11 patients with hematuria, 2 patients with flank pain and one asymptomatic patient. Five patients had a history of bladder cancer and one had a history of contralateral UTUC. There were 4 patients with solitary kidney, 3 patients with renal insufficiency, 1 patient with bilateral renal pelvis carcinoma, 4 patients prohibitory to nephroureterectomy because of poor general condition (American Society of Anesthesiologists score ≥3), and 2 patients were pathologically diagnosed as low-grade non-invasive urothelial carcinoma and requested renal preservation therapy. A total of 15 renal units included. The main tumor sites were renal pelvis in 6 renal units, upper calyx in 4 renal units, middle calyx in 3 renal units, and lower calyx in 2 renal units. The median tumor diameter was 2.0 (0.8-4.0) cm. All patients were diagnosed with urothelial carcinoma by preoperative computed tomography (CT/CTU), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and cytological or pathological biopsy. In 13 patients, ultrasond-guided percutaneous renal access and tract dilation were performed to establish a F24 standard tract. The tumor tissues were vaporized by 1470 semiconductor laser (60-80 W) or thulium laser (15-20 W) under nephroscopy, and electrocoagulation was used to coagulate the bleeding when necessary. Two patients were treated with felxible ureteroscope, under which tumor ablation was performed with 200 μm holmium laser fiber, and neodymium laser was used for hemostasis. The range of tumor vaporization ablation included 0.5-1.0 cm normal renal pelvis mucosa around the tumor, deep to the fatty layer of renal sinus. Biopsy was taken again at the base of the wound after vaporization ablation when necessary.Results:In this study, six sites were pathological high grade, 9 sites were pathological low grade tumors. Eight were in pathological T a stage, 5 in T 1 stage, and 2 in T 2 stage. The median blood loss was 20.0 (2-50) ml. There were 5 postoperative complications, including one patient with fever (body temperature >38.5℃) and 4 patients with hemorrhage requiring blood transfusion (postoperative hemoglobin <70 g/L) with 2-4 U suspended red blood cells.No patient underwent embolization. The median follow-up time were 31(11-70)months. Ten patients experienced recurrence, and the median time to recurrence was 11.3 (4-41) months. Four of them received conservative treatment after recurrence, including immunotherapy and radiotherapy in 1 patient, systemic chemotherapy in 1 patient, and watchful waiting in 2 patients. Three of them received repeated endoscopic treatment after recurrence, including 2 patients with percutaneous nephroscopic laser ablation and 1 patient with transurethral resection of bladder tumor, all of them survived during the follow-up period. Three patients underwent full-length nephroureterectomy after recurrence, 2 died and 1 survived during the follow-up period. Six patients eventually died, and the median time of death after surgery was 21(9-33) months. Five of them died from tumor-specific death and one died from gastric perforation. The median tumor-free survival interval were11 (4-41) months during the follow-up period. The 2-year tumor-specific survival rate was 78.6%, 50% for high-grade patients and 100% for low-grade patients. Conclusions:In patients who were in early stage (≤T 2) and intolerant to the nephroureterectomy, or with solitary kidney, renal insufficiency, or bilateral tumors, endoscopic treatment could be used as an alternative treatment approach for upper urinary tract epithelial carcinoma, especially for low-grade non-invasive patients.