Sixty patients with congenital deformities of the spine were operated upon in the past fifteen years using a two-stage procedure. In the fifty patients with scoliosis half of the deformities were due to hemivertebrae and half to unilateral bars. The average correction of the deformity was 47 per cent. Early neurological signs observed in two patients with a diastematomyelia resolved. Of the ten patients with kyphosis nine had neurological signs of impending paraplegia and one was completely paraplegic before operation; all improved markedly. Posterior spinal fusion alone in the rapidly progressing congenital deformity may not prevent further progression, particularly in those cases iwth unilateral bars. Anterior resection of the
1. Resolving infantile scoliosis is transient and unimportant; progressive infantile idiopathic scoliosis can be catastrophic. 2. To be able to differentiate the two at an early stage is a considerable advance. This is important for many reasons, but particularly for parents who are anxious for the future of an infant with a small curve which looks so innocent but which can be so malignant. 3. With the new observations reported by Mehta on the difference of the angles between the apical vertebra and its two ribs, and on the radiological relationship of these rib heads to the
1. At the present stage of our experience, when 150 patients have been analysed over a period of five years, the conclusion has been reached that anterior interbody fusion in the lower lumbar spine is a procedure which should be added to our surgical armamentarium for use in selected cases. 2. Patients suffering from chronic intervertebral disc degeneration whose main symptoms are recurrent incapacitating backache derive the most benefit from this procedure. 3. When used as a salvage operation in patients who have had previous unsuccessful laminectomy or posterior fusion, good results can be expected. 4. In patients with spondylolisthesis anterior interbody fusion should be confined to cases in which the
A new technique for the transthoracic removal of a prolapsed intervertebral disc in the mid or lower thoracic spine is described. Investigations before operation include thoracic myelography, selective spinal angiography and CT scanning. Image intensification is used at operation to check the level of the prolapse. A tunnel in the coronal plane (vertebrotomy) is made through the posterolateral part of the disc and the adjacent
A clinical, cadaveric, biomechanical and radiological investigation of the pathogenesis of idiopathic scoliosis indicates that biplanar asymmetry is the essential lesion. Many normal children have coronal plane asymmetry (an inconsequential lateral curvature of the spine), and certainly all have
This paper describes a simple method for the recording of rib deformity in idiopathic scoliosis. The relationships have been recorded between the measured rib hump and rib depression deformities and 1) the rotation of the
1. A comparison of the results of sixty patients with Pott's paraplegia, half operated upon and half treated conservatively, showed that better results were achieved in a much shorter time in those treated surgically. 2. Extra-pleural antero-lateral decompression is the operation of choice in cases of Pott's paraplegia. 3. The operation should be done as soon as the general condition of the patient allows, and should not be left until the disease is quiescent. 4. The greatest improvement is found in those patients who are still ambulant. 5. Although the gain in patients with complete paraplegia may be small, relief from painful flexor spasms and the healing of bed-sores often justify surgical treatment. 6. Fusion of the
1. An unusual congenital anomaly of the cervical spine is described. This lesion caused a localised cervical kyphosis and resulted in the development of a mild tetraparesis. 2. The case reported is believed to be the first on record in the English literature of multiple posterior hemivertebrae in the cervical region. 3. The neck deformity was associated with an unusual combination of developmental anomalies–namely, brachyphalangy and bilateral congenital optic atrophy. 4. The importance of differentiating between congenital and acquired causes of kyphosis is emphasised. 5. The radiographic appearances of posterior hemivertebra are described, and the differential diagnosis is considered. 6. The development of the
Twenty-two cases of paraplegia complicating injury of the cervical column have been reviewed. The vertebral injury may be due to flexion or hyperextension violence. Flexion injuryâThere are three types of flexion injury: 1) dislocation; 2) compression fracture of a
We studied MR images of the spine in a consecutive series of 100 patients with acute compression of the spinal cord due to metastases. All patients had documented neurological deficit and histologically proven carcinoma. MRI was used to localise bony metastatic involvement and soft-tissue impingement of the cord. A systematic method of documenting metastatic involvement is described. A total of 43 patients had compression at multiple levels; 160 vertebral levels were studied. In 120 vertebrae (75%), anterior, lateral and posterior bony elements were involved. Soft-tissue impingement of the spinal cord often involved more than one quadrant of its circumference. In 69 vertebrae (43%) there was concomitant anterior and posterior compression. Isolated involvement of a
We performed a randomised, controlled clinical trial to compare ambulant short-course chemotherapy with anterior spinal fusion plus short-course chemotherapy for spinal tuberculosis without paraplegia. Patients with active disease of
We have studied the intervertebral discs adjacent to fractured
We report the management of two children and 11 adults with paraplegia secondary to vertebral hydatidosis. Destruction of pedicles, posterior vertebral elements and discs as well as the
Of a total of 905 patients with fracture or fracture-dislocation of the thoracolumbar spine admitted from 1969 to 1982, a neurological deficit was present in 334 (37%). All unstable injuries were initially treated by reduction and posterior fusion. In 79 of these patients, an anterolateral decompression was undertaken later because of persistent neurological deficit and radiographic demonstration of encroachment on the spinal canal. One patient died of pulmonary embolism; 78 were reviewed after a mean period of four years. Of these 78 patients 18 made a complete neurological recovery while 53 appeared to have benefited from the procedure; 25 remained unchanged. The best results were obtained in burst fractures at thoracolumbar and lumbar levels when a solitary detached fragment of a
Eleven articulated scoliotic spines were examined radiographically and morphometrically. Measurement of the curve on anteroposterior radiographs of the specimens gave a mean Cobb angle of 70 degrees, though true anteroposterior radiographs of the deformity revealed a mean Cobb angle of 99 degrees (41% greater). Lateral radiographs gave the erroneous impression that there was a mean kyphosis of 41 degrees while true lateral projections revealed a mean apical lordosis of 14 degrees. Morphometric measurements confirmed the presence of a lordosis at bony level, the apical
A modification of a previously reported one-stage technique for reduction and stabilisation of severe spondylolisthesis using a posterior route is described. Reduction is obtained by inserting Harrington rods to lift L5 vertically out of the pelvis and two double-threaded screws to pull it backwards. After reduction the rods are taken away and stabilisation achieved by means of screws and a sacral bar. With this modified technique lumbar vertebrae above L5 are never immobilised, compared with the previous method where the retention of the Harrington rods resulted in more lumbar vertebrae being immobilised than was necessary for fusion. Bone is resected from the sacrum and the fifth lumbar vertebra to avoid too much tension on the nerve roots. Bone grafts are not needed and lumbosacral fusion is achieved within six months due to close contact between the raw bone of the
This review shows that inter-body spinal fusion can be achieved in a satisfying percentage of cases, and the assertion that there is an intrinsic factor peculiar to the
Discitis is uncommon in children and presents in different ways at different ages. It is most difficult to diagnose in the uncommunicative toddler of one to three years of age. We present 11 consecutive cases. The non-specific clinical features included refusal to walk (63%), back pain (27%), inability to flex the lower back (50%) and a loss of lumbar lordosis (40%). Laboratory tests were unhelpful and cultures of blood and disc tissue were negative. MRI reduces the diagnostic delay and may help to avoid the requirement for a biopsy. In 75% of cases it demonstrated a paravertebral inflammatory mass, which helped to determine the duration of the oral therapy given after initial intravenous antibiotics. At a mean follow-up of 21 months (10 to 40), all the spines were mobile and the patients free from pain. Radiological fusion occurred in 20% and was predictable after two years. At follow-up, MRI showed variable appearances: changes in the
Anchorage of pedicle screw rod instrumentation in the elderly spine with poor bone quality remains challenging. Our study aims to evaluate how the screw bone anchorage is affected by screw design, bone quality, loading conditions, and cementing techniques. Micro-finite element (µFE) models were created from micro-CT (μCT) scans of vertebrae implanted with two types of pedicle screws (L: Ennovate and R: S4). Simulations were conducted for a 10 mm radius region of interest (ROI) around each screw and for a full vertebra (FV) where different cementing scenarios were simulated around the screw tips. Stiffness was calculated in pull-out and anterior bending loads.Aims
Methods