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SURGICAL CORRECTION OF FIXED POST TRAUMATIC DEFORMITY BY THORACOLUMBAR OSTEOTOMY.



Abstract

Post Traumatic Fixed Thoraco-Lumbar Spinal Deformity may result in pain, regional and or global spinal deformity and neural compromise. Treatment is demanding as osteotomy is required in either anterior alone or both anterior and posterior spinal columns with concomitant reconstruction. This paper reviews 15 years experience with these cases.

A retrospective review of 21 patients operated on over 15 years was conducted. Patients were grouped based on original thoraco-lumbar injury pattern – Type A, B and C. Osteotomies and reconstruction were performed from both anterior and posterior approaches dependent upon the pathology. Clinical and radiological follow up for all patients was a minimum of one year. Analysis of outcomes was performed in relation to the clinical and radiological success. Complications were recorded.

Sixteen patients had two-column involvement and five had only the anterior column affected. Initial injury patterns were – Type A–9, Type B–4, and Type C–8. Approaches were anterior in six (five in Type A injuries), posterior and anterior in 11 (five two-stage and six three-stage operations), and posterior only in four (one pedicle subtraction osteotomy, one vertebral column resection, one posterior reduction of a dislocation, and one case abandoned after the posterior procedure). Anterior reconstruction was performed with structural iliac crest (two), titanium mesh cages (14) and expanding corpectomy cages (three). All 14 cases requiring posterior stabilisation were treated with pedicle screw based systems. The global assessment of outcome was individualised to the original indication – mechanical pain, deformity, and or symptomatic spinal stenosis. Success (good or excellent outcome) was achieved in 16 cases. Failure (fair or poor outcome) occur red in three completed cases. These three cases had chronic pain (two major, one minor). Two patients had incomplete assessment – one dying of MI in recovery after a technically successful procedure – and one developing deep infection with abandonment of the later stages (see above). There was one non-union. There were no neurological complications.

Delayed treatment of late posttraumatic deformity is challenging however good results are achievable with attention to the specific clinical and biomechanical requirements of each case. Technical failure occurred with inadequately radical intervention on one occasion. Major chronic thoracotomy pain occurred in one otherwise technically successful reconstruction.

Correspondence should be addressed to Associate Professor N. Susan Stott, Orthopaedic Department, Starship Children’s Hospital, Private Bag 92024, Auckland, New Zealand.