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Lumbar spine fracture and dislocation

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Presentation on theme: "Lumbar spine fracture and dislocation"— Presentation transcript:

1 Lumbar spine fracture and dislocation
ANDALIB,ALI.MD Fellowship of spine surgery Medical university of Isfahan Kashani hospital

2 Age : male under 30 yrs old MCA Fall from height Sport Geriatric population Falling from standing position

3 Anatomic Classification
2 or 3 Columns Denis ‘83 McAfee ‘83 Ferguson & Allen’84 Holdsworth’62 Kelley & Whitesides ’68

4 3 Column Classification
Denis Anterior - Ant 1/2 of disc /VB + ALL Middle - Post 1/2 of disc/VB PLL Posterior - Post Elements

5 Mc Afee classification
Compression FX 2.Burst Fx 3.Flex-Distraction 4.FX-Dx

6 Mechanism of injury and classification
Wedge compression fx Isolated failure of ant column Forward flex Neurologic injury rare except multiple adjucent vertebra

7 Wedge compression fx

8 Wedge compression fx

9 BURST FX key features : posterior vertebral body cortex fracture with retropulsion of bone into the canal widening of the interpedicular distance relative to the adjacent levels

10 Stable burst fx Ant and mid column fail in compression Unstable burst fx Ant and mid column fail in compression and post column fail in compression,lat flex or rotation and not fail in distraction

11 Burst fx

12 Burst fx

13 Burst fx

14 FLEX-DISTRACTION Flex distraction injury(bony or soft tissue)
Flex axis post to ALL Ant column fail in compression Mid and post column fail in tension Unstable pattern( PLC failed)

15 PLC POSTERIOR LIG. COMPLEX(PLC): SUPRASPINOUS LIG INTERSPINOUS LIG
LIGAMENTUM FLAVUM FACET JOINT CAPSULE

16 Flex distraction injury

17 CT SCAN

18 MRI(flex-Distraction)

19 Traslational injury(fx -dx injury)
Malalignment neural canal Three column fail in shear Displacment in transverse plane

20 Traslational injury(fx dx injury)

21 Primary care ABC and ATLS hypovolemic shock vs neurogenic shock
Log rolling technique and back board

22 Logrolling technique

23 Associated injury 45% seat belt fx intra abdominal injury(spleen,liver) 20% noncontiguous spinal fx(total spine x ray) Head injury and fx of extremities

24

25 History and physical exam

26

27 Cauda Equina Syndrome Cord ends L1/2 disc space
Lower motor neuron axons(nerve roots from L1-5 and S1-5) Perianal anesthesia(saddle anesthesia), sphincter and bladder dysfunction,severe LBP,motror defecit

28

29 Imaging AP x ray:interpedcular widening(burst fx),
Increased interspinous process distance(damage of PLC) Lat x ray:kyphotic deformity(cobb angle),vertebral collapse, PVB

30 % Anterior Height Loss=A1[(a'+a")/2] x 100
% Posterior Height Loss=P/[(p'+p")/2] x 100

31 PVB

32

33 CT scan Comminution of vertebral body Retropulsed fragment(size,location) Post element fx Helical CT scan choice in polytrauma pt

34 Burst fx

35 MRI Disc herniation Epidural hematoma Lig injury(PLC) -fat suppressed T2-weighted image(STIR) Intrasubstans alteration of spina cord(myelomalacia) SCIWORA Gun shot(contraversial)

36 Treatment goals: Maintain or restore spinal stability
Correct deformity(coronal,sagital) Maximum neurologic recovery Improve pain Prompt rehabilitation

37 T.L fx treatment is controversial
operation vs nonoperation? 2. optimal approach for patients who will be treated operation?(Ant vs Post) 3. direct decompression vs indirect decompression ?

38 no definitive literature
most spine surgeons would not recommend allowing persistent neural compression in the presence of a neurological deficit.

39 the treatment of thoracic and lumbar fractures
Neurological status of a patient(spinal cord, conus medullaris, or cauda equina injuries) Global imbalance in the sagittal or coronal plane ( No regional deformity) injury to the PLC

40 Non operative Indication Close observe Height loss>50%
Focal kyphosis>25deg PLC disruption Obvious instability Intact PLC stable burst fx, normal neurologic exam stable burst and complete spinal cord injury

41 Nonoperative treatment
Jewett brace or TLSO(caudal to T7) L5-S1 segment not sufficiently stabilized

42 Jewett brace (lateral bending is less of a concern)

43 TLSO

44 Compression fx treatment
TLSO 12 weeks Pain improve 3 to 6 week Upright radiograph after brace

45 OPERATIVE TREATMENT (Ant vs post)
Short segment posterior instrumentation the most common construct used, but specific construct design is dictated by the injury pattern and the neurology of the patient

46 SURGICAL APPROACH posterior approach is often favored with disruption of the PLC anterior approach in an incomplete neurologic injury with obvious anterior thecal sac compression.

47 POST APPROACH ONLY With PLC disruption Rotational and shear injury
Canal compromise <50% with neurologic deficit

48 POST APPROACH ligamentotaxis

49 Short or long costruct? Disadvantage Advantage of short costruct
Less fused segment Short surgical time Low cost Disadvantage High failure rate and psudoarthrosis

50 Always long Osteoprosis Sever kyphosis Thoracolumbar junction
Sever comminution

51 Short costruct in Post app.
Low lumbar FX 360 fusion

52 ANT APPROACH Canal compromise>67% and neurologic deficit
Sever comminutted fx More than 5 days and neurologic deficit Kyphosis>30 and neurologic deficit Reverse cortical sign

53 REVERSE CORTICAL SIGN

54 Post app in severe neurologic deficit
In pt with poor prognosis(Fx-DX) Fx in proximal of thoracic vertebra decompresion with laminectomy

55 Contraindication of Ant.
Post instability 1.kyphosis>30 2.v.body collapse>50% 3.Translation>2.5mm 4.PLC disruption Sever osteoprosis Chest &abdomen injury Sever obesity &pulmonary disease L4-L5 fx

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57

58 Take home message Anatomical fracture reduction, although desirable, has not been the primary treatment objective.

59 Thank you for attention


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