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Analysis of Posterior Cervical Fixation and Fusion in Subaxial Cervical Spine Injury
Article de Ko | WPRIM | ID: wpr-11641
Bibliothèque responsable: WPRO
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: In the retrospective analyzing 19 consecutive patients with subaxial cervical spine(C3~T1) injury treated by posterior cervical fixation and fusion, clinical manifestation, radiologic finding, operative technique, and postoperative results following 6 months were analyzed. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Most common fracture level was C4-5, mean age 41, and male to female ratio 13: 6. The most common cause of injury was motor vehicle accident(17 cases). In 19 cervical procedures, interspinous triple wiring was done in 14 cases, lateral mass plating in 5 cases, and additional anterior fusion in 2 cases. RESULTS: Twelve weeks after operation, all cases were reviewed by plain cervical radiogram. In 17 cases that treated by posterior fusion only, 14 cases(81%) had kyphotic angle change less than 5degrees, 2 cases(12%) 5-20degrees, and 1 case(6%) more than 20degrees. Overall fusion rate was 88%, and there was no significant difference of bone fusion rate between autogenous bone graft and allogenous bone graft. CONCLUSION: In the case of severe posterior column injury or displacement, posterior approach seems superior to anterior approach, but in the case of combined anterior column injury, anterior approach is considered necessary. In this study, posterior fixation and fusion might be acceptable procedure for subaxial cervical fracture and dislocation, owing to its high fusion rate, low kyphotic angulation and low operation related complication rate.
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Mots clés
Texte intégral: 1 Indice: WPRIM Sujet Principal: Rachis / Études rétrospectives / Véhicules motorisés / Transplants / Luxations Type d'étude: Observational_studies Limites du sujet: Female / Humans / Male langue: Ko Texte intégral: Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society Année: 2001 Type: Article
Texte intégral: 1 Indice: WPRIM Sujet Principal: Rachis / Études rétrospectives / Véhicules motorisés / Transplants / Luxations Type d'étude: Observational_studies Limites du sujet: Female / Humans / Male langue: Ko Texte intégral: Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society Année: 2001 Type: Article