Compression fracture in the middle of a chronic instrumented fusion that developed into pseudarthrosis after balloon kyphoplasty

2014 ◽  
Vol 20 (6) ◽  
pp. 705-708 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen M. Pirris ◽  
Sherri M. Kimes

There are only 2 documented cases of vertebral compression fractures occurring within a solid lumbar fusion mass: one within the fusion mass after hardware removal and the other within the levels of the existing instrumentation 1 year postoperatively. The authors report a case of fracture occurring in a chronic (> 30 years) solid instrumented fusion mass in a patient who underwent kyphoplasty. The pain did not improve after the kyphoplasty procedure, and the patient developed a posterior cleft in the fusion mass postoperatively. The patient, a 46-year-old woman, had undergone a T4–L4 instrumented fusion with placement of a Harrington rod when she was 12 years old. Adjacent-segment breakdown developed, and her fusion was extended to the pelvis, with pedicle screws placed up to L-3 to capture the existing fusion mass. Almost 2 years after fusion extension, she fell down the stairs and suffered an L-2 compression fracture, which is when kyphoplasty was performed without pain relief, and she then developed a cleft in the posterior fusion mass that was previously intact. She refused further surgical options. This case report is meant to alert surgeons of this possibility and allow them to consider the rare occurrence of fracture within the fusion mass when planning extension of chronic spinal fusions.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kuei-Lin Yeh ◽  
Szu-Hsien Wu ◽  
Shing-Sheng Wu ◽  
Sheng-Mou Hou

Abstract BackgroundOsteoporosis with vertebral compression fractures is increasingly common in the elderly. As no studies have compared the safety and efficacy of surgical techniques for the treatment of such fractures, we retrospectively compared vertebroplasty, balloon kyphoplasty, and kyphoplasty with SpineJack or an intravertebral expandable pillar (IVEP). In this study, we retrospectively compared the safety and efficacy, including visual analog scale scores for pain, kyphotic angle, average body height, rate of cement leakage, and occurrence of adjacent vertebral compression fractures of each surgical intervention mentioned above at Shin-Kong Wu Ho-Su Memorial Hospital. All patients underwent surgical treatment under Dr. Wu. MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed 10 years of data of 354 patients with vertebral compression fractures, randomly dividing them into five groups. All these patients were diagnosed with fresh compression fracture, defined as signal changes on T1 phase by magnetic resonance imaging examination. Their visual analog scale scores for pain, kyphotic angle, average body height, rate of cement leakage, and occurrence of adjacent vertebral compression fractures were followed up for 1 year. ANOVA, the post hoc Bonferroni test, and Fisher’s exact probability test were used for statistical analyses.ResultsAll pain scores significantly improved 12 months postoperatively; however, there was no significant difference between the groups. Kyphoplasty with SpineJack significantly reduced the kyphotic angle, restoring the vertebral body height; adjacent compression fracture rate was highest in the vertebroplasty group (p=0.020). The method with the lowest cement leakage rate remains unidentified due to the small sample size; however, kyphoplasty with SpineJack, intravertebral expandable pillar, and vesselplasty resulted in lower rates than balloon kyphoplasty or vertebroplasty.ConclusionsVertebroplasty and kyphoplasty were excellent treatments for vertebral compression fractures, with no differences in pain relief. Kyphoplasty with SpineJack entailed a lower risk of cement extravasation, resulting in greater vertebral body height restoration and kyphotic reduction than other groups. While the safest method remains unclear, Kyphoplasty with SpineJack, intravertebral expandable pillar, and vesselplasty resulted in low rates of cement leakage. Kyphoplasty with intravertebral expandable pillar resulted in the lowest adjacent compression fracture rate.


2018 ◽  
Vol 07 (03) ◽  
Author(s):  
Cornelis Wilhelmus Jacobus van Tilburg ◽  
Johannes George Groeneweg ◽  
Dirk Leendert Stronks ◽  
Frank Johannes Petrus Maria Huygen

Author(s):  
Yakhya M. Yakhyaev ◽  
M. I. Izrailov ◽  
V. N. Merkulov ◽  
A. M. Aliskandiev ◽  
T. Ya. Yakhyaeva

X-ray diagnostics of compression fractures of bodies of the thoracic vertebrae in children not seldom causes great difficulties due to the fact that even in healthy children vertebrae have a number of features, particularly, the wedge shape. For the purpose of differential diagnosis there was performed chest X-ray examination of the thoracic vertebrae in healthy children and cases after the compression damage. The wedge index and the disk coefficient for various segments of the thoracic spine were calculated. The diagnostic efficiency of radionuclide studies was estimated to reaches 79%. The useof highly informative modern medical techniques (CT and MRI) in the diagnosis of vertebral compression fractures in children allows accurately and timely make the diagnosis and determine the condition of the surrounding tissues. Based on the analysis of medical records, radiographs, identification of options of radionuclide, CT and MRI studies, there was elaborated an algorithm for the diagnosis of compression fractures of vertebrae, which allowed optimize the diagnostic process. There are determined advantages of this algorithm.


2014 ◽  
Vol 14 (9) ◽  
pp. 2063-2077 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lars Hübschle ◽  
Fredrik Borgström ◽  
Gylfi Olafsson ◽  
Christoph Röder ◽  
Patrick Moulin ◽  
...  

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