The fate of proximal junctional vertebral fractures after long-segment spinal fixation: Are there predictable radiologic characteristics for revision surgery?

4Citations
Citations of this article
11Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Objective: To investigate the radiographic characteristics of the uppermost instrumented vertebrae (UIV) and UIV+1 compression fractures that are predictive of revision surgery following long-segment spinal fixation. Methods: A total 27 patients who presented newly developed compression fracture at UIV, UIV+1 after long segment spinal fixation (minimum 5 vertebral bodies, lowest instrumented vertebra of L5 or distal) were reviewed retrospectively. Patients were divided into two groups according to following management: revisional surgery (group A, n=13) and conservative care (group B, n=14). Pre- and postoperative images, and images taken shortly before and after the occurrence of fracture were evaluated for radiologic characteristics Results: Despite similar degrees of surgical correction of deformity, the fate of the two groups with proximal junctional compression fractures differed. Immediately after the fracture, the decrement of adjacent disc height in group A (32.3±7.6 mm to 23.7±8.4 mm,?=8.5±6.9 mm) was greater than group B (31.0±13.9 mm to 30.1±15.5 mm,?=0.9±2.9 mm, p=0.003). Pre-operative magnetic resonance imaging indicated that group A patients have a higher grade of disc degeneration adjacent to fractured vertebrae compared to group B (modified Pfirrmann grade, group A: 6.10±0.99, group B: 4.08±0.90, p=0.004). Binary logistic regression analysis indicated that decrement of disc height was the only associated risk factor for future revision surgery (odds ratio, 1.891; 95% confidence interval, 1.121-3.190; p=0.017). Conclusion: Proximal junctional vertebral compression fractures with greater early-stage decrement of adjacent disc height were associated with increased risk of future neurological deterioration and necessity of revision. The condition of adjacent disc degeneration should be considered regarding severity and revision rate of proximal junctional kyphosis/proximal junction failures.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Jang, H. J., Park, J. Y., ParkKuh, S. U., Chin, D. K., Kim, K. S., Cho, Y. E., … Kim, K. H. (2021). The fate of proximal junctional vertebral fractures after long-segment spinal fixation: Are there predictable radiologic characteristics for revision surgery? Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society, 64(3), 437–446. https://doi.org/10.3340/jkns.2020.0236

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free