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EARLY AMBULATORY HALO-JACKET IMMOBILISATION IN PAEDIATRIC SPINAL INSTABILITY



Abstract

The aim of this study was to assess the use of early ambulatory halo-thoracic immobilisation in paediatric patients with spinal instability.

The case notes, radiographs and clinical findings at follow-up of 12 patients treated this way were reviewed. The mean age was 8.6 years (4 to 16). The aetiology was trauma in six, os odontoidium in one, tuberculosis in three, and Morquios syndrome and chronic granulomatous osteitis in one each. The instabilities were atlanto-axial rotatory subluxation in one patient, transverse ligament rupture in six, dens anomalies in two, anterior destruction by tuberculosis in two, and a dens fracture. The halo jackets were applied under general anaesthetic. In addition, posterior C1/2 fusions were performed in seven patients, posterior occipitocervical decompression and fusions in two, and posterolateral thoracotomies in two. No surgery was done on the patient with the dens fracture. Autograft was used in all cases except one posterior C1/2 fusion. This patient, who was HIV-positive, was the only one in whom union did not occur. There was one case of minor pin-tract sepsis. All patients mobilised in the halo jacket and, where possible, were managed as outpatients. Despite radiological nonunion in one patient, spinal stability was achieved in all.

Early ambulatory halo jacket immobilisation is a useful, safe and well-tolerated technique in the paediatric patient group.

Secretary: Dr H.J.S. Colyn, Editor: Professor M.B.E. Sweet. Correspondence should be addressed to SAOA, Box 47363, Parklands, Johannesburg, 2121, South Africa.