The most common fracture of the cervical spine in the elderly population is a fracture of the odontoid peg. Such fractures are usually not displaced and these are commonly treated non-operatively. Rarely though, peg fractures are displaced and then their management is less straightforward. This is in part because the group of patients who sustain them frequently have complex and pre-existing medical co-morbidities and in part because a new neurological injury may have been sustained as a result of the peg fracture itself. Many options for the management of displaced peg fractures, both operative and non-operative have been described in the literature and discussion continues as to which technique is superior and in which patient population. The purpose of this study was to follow-up those patients who were managed operatively in our unit between 2007 and 2009. We present our case series of 4 patients who sustained significantly displaced fractures of the odontoid peg with accompanying neurological injury, who were treated with posterior stabilisation using the Harms technique.Purposes of the study
Methods and Results