C. Knop, H. Fabian, L. Bastian, H. Rosenthal, U. Lange, M. Zdichavsky, M. Blauth


January 2002, Volume 11, Issue 3, pp 251 - 257 Original Article Read Full Article 10.1007/s00586-001-0360-z

First Online: 11 January 2002

The authors present a retrospective clinical and radiological study addressing the outcome after posterior stabilisation of thoracolumbar fractures with intervertebral fusion via transpedicular bone grafting. The study included computed tomographic (CT) scan after implant removal for analysis of the intervertebral fusion and incorporation of the intervertebral bone graft and its influence on postoperative re-kyphosing. Twenty-nine patients with acute fractures of the thoracolumbar spine, treated between 1988 and 1995 at the Department of Trauma Surgery, Hannover Medical School, underwent posterior stabilisation and interbody fusion with transpedicular cancellous bone grafting. This study group was followed clinically and radiologically for a mean of 3.5 years. All patients underwent spiral CT scan with sagittal reconstruction after implant removal. Twenty-four type A, four type B, and one type C lesion were posteriorly stabilised and transpedicular intervertebral bone grafting was performed. The operative time averaged 2 h 50 min, the intraoperative fluoroscopy time 4 min 7 s, and the mean intraoperative blood loss was 376 ml. Four patients out of six with an incomplete neurologic lesion (Frankel/ASIA D) improved to Frankel/ASIA grade E. Two complications were observed: one delayed wound healing and one venous thrombosis with secondary pulmonary embolism. Compared to the preoperative status, our follow-up examinations demonstrated permanent social sequelae: the percentage of individuals able to do physical labor was reduced, whereas the proportion of unemployed or retired patients increased. The assessment of complaints and functional outcome with the Hannover Spine Score reflected a significant difference (P


Read Full Article