改良自生长棒技术治疗早发性脊柱侧凸。

Hossein Mehdian, Sleiman Haddad, Dritan Pasku, Craig Masek, Luigi Aurelio Nasto
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引用次数: 1

摘要

早发性脊柱侧凸(EOS)的手术治疗仍然具有挑战性,因为在这一不同的患者群体中,没有明确的手术技术作为单一的最佳选择。尽管现有的手术技术可能有很大的不同,但它们都有相同的目标,即实现和维持畸形矫正,允许脊柱生理性生长,减少手术次数和并发症。在此,我们提出了一种改良的自生长棒技术,它代表了EOS现有外科手术的有效替代方法。描述:患者俯卧在一张透光的手术台上,准备脊柱并按标准方式垂下。后中线皮肤切口从上至下固定水平。进行脊柱骨膜下暴露,确保小关节囊不受影响。椎弓根螺钉在内固定的头端和尾端两侧插入。通常建议在椎弓根顶端和底部使用至少3节位的螺钉固定;对于不能活动的骨盆倾斜患者,可以用双侧髂螺钉将尾侧固定扩展到骨盆。椎板下钢丝位于内固定装置的颅端和尾端之间的每一层,并尽可能向内侧穿过,以避免损伤小关节。四个5毫米钴铬棒被切割,轮廓,并在结构的两端插入。使用椎板下钢丝固定同侧椎棒,确保它们重叠足够长的长度,以允许剩余的脊柱生长。通过渐进和顺序收紧椎板下钢丝,结合使用悬臂手法和根尖平移来矫正畸形。伤口在筋膜下引流处分层闭合。术后患者可自由活动。术后不需要支架。替代方案:EOS的非手术替代治疗包括连续铸造固定和支具4。替代的外科治疗方法包括传统的生长棒、磁控生长棒、垂直可伸缩的假体钛肋骨扩张技术和新罗技术。其他作者也报道了使用基于压缩的系统(即订书钉或系钉)9或早期有限融合。理由:我们技术的主要优点是它依赖于脊柱的生理性生长,不需要手术或外部装置来延长棒,这对患有神经肌肉疾病的虚弱患者特别有益,他们不建议重复手术。椎板下钢丝进行节段性固定可以在生长过程中很好地控制畸形顶点。关于脊柱早期融合的担忧在我们的中期随访研究中尚未得到证实。预期结果:该技术可在术后数年内矫正畸形和脊柱的持续生长。术后6.0年,主曲线矫正率平均为61%,骨盆倾斜矫正率平均为69%。据报道,术后脊柱平均延长40.9毫米(范围,14.0至84.0毫米),T1-S1节段继续以10.5毫米/年的速度生长(范围,3.6至16.5毫米/年)10。最常见的并发症是胸腰椎连接处的椎棒断裂,这似乎更常见于特发性或脑瘫患者和青春期生长高峰期。重要提示:应进行骨膜下暴露脊柱,确保保留脊柱未融合区域的小关节。在每一节段使用椎板下钢丝,在内固定装置的上下两端使用椎弓根螺钉,实现节段性固定。如果存在盆腔不平衡且患者不能走动,建议使用髂螺钉进行盆腔固定。采用悬臂技术实现畸形的第一轮矫正;校正微调可通过收紧椎板下钢丝进行。考虑在特发性或脑瘫的情况下使用较粗的棒。缩略语:EOS =早发性脊柱侧凸ap =前后位orev =椎骨末端sep =体感诱发电位smep =运动诱发电位spjk =近端连接性后凸sma =脊髓性肌萎缩cp =脑瘫pacu =麻醉后护理单元
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A Modified Self-Growing Rod Technique for Treatment of Early-Onset Scoliosis.

Surgical treatment of early-onset scoliosis (EOS) remains challenging as no definitive surgical technique has emerged as the single best option in this varied patient population1-3. Although the available surgical techniques may differ substantially, they all share the same goals of achieving and maintaining deformity correction, allowing physiological spinal growth, and reducing the number of operations and complications. Herein, we present a modified self-growing rod technique that represents a valid alternative to the existing surgical procedures for EOS.

Description: The patient is positioned prone on a radiolucent table, and the spine is prepared and draped in a standard fashion. A posterior midline skin incision is made from the upper to the lower instrumented level. Subperiosteal exposure of the spine is carried out, ensuring that capsules of the facet joints are spared. Pedicle screws are inserted bilaterally at the cranial and caudal ends of the instrumentation. Fixation with pedicle screws of at least 3 levels at the top and bottom end is usually advised; in nonambulatory patients with pelvic obliquity, caudal fixation can be extended to the pelvis with bilateral iliac screws. Sublaminar wires are positioned bilaterally at every level between the cranial and caudal ends of the instrumentation and are passed as medially as possible to avoid damage to the facet joints. Four 5-mm cobalt-chromium rods are cut, contoured, and inserted at each end of the construct. Ipsilateral rods are secured with use of sublaminar wires, making sure that they overlap over a sufficient length to allow for the remaining spinal growth. Correction of the deformity is achieved with use of a combination of cantilever maneuvers and apical translation by progressive and sequential tightening of the sublaminar wires. The wound is closed in layers over a subfascial drain. The patient is allowed free mobilization after surgery. No postoperative brace is required.

Alternatives: Nonoperative alternative treatment for EOS includes serial cast immobilization and bracing4. Alternative surgical treatments include traditional growing rods5, magnetically controlled growing rods6, the vertical expandable prosthetic titanium rib-expansion technique7, and the Shilla technique8. The use of compression-based systems (i.e., staples or tether)9 or early limited fusion has also been reported by other authors.

Rationale: The main advantage of our technique is that it relies on physiological spinal growth and does not require surgery or external devices for rod lengthening, which is particularly beneficial in frail patients with a neuromuscular disease in whom repeated surgery is not advised. Segmental fixation by sublaminar wires allows good control of the deformity apex during growth. Concerns regarding early fusion of the spine have not been confirmed in our mid-term follow-up study10.

Expected outcomes: This technique allows correction of the deformity and continuous spinal growth in the years following surgery. At 6.0 years postoperatively, the average main curve correction was reported to be 61% and the average pelvic obliquity correction was 69%. The spine was reported to lengthen an average of 40.9 mm (range, 14.0 to 84.0 mm) immediately postoperatively, and the T1-S1 segment was reported to continue growing at 10.5 mm/year (range, 3.6 to 16.5 mm/year) thereafter10. The most common complication is rod breakage at the thoracolumbar junction, which seems to be more common in patients with idiopathic or cerebral palsy EOS and during the pubertal growth spurt10.

Important tips: Subperiosteal exposure of the spine should be carried out, making sure to preserve facet joints in the unfused area of the spine.Achieve segmental fixation with use of sublaminar wires at every level and pedicle screws at the top and bottom ends of the instrumentation.If pelvic imbalance is present and the patient is nonambulatory, pelvic fixation with iliac screws is advised.First round correction of the deformity is achieved with a cantilever technique; correction fine-tuning can be performed by tightening sublaminar wires.Consider utilizing thicker rods in cases of idiopathic or cerebral palsy EOS.

Acronyms and abbreviations: EOS = early-onset scoliosisAP = anteroposteriorEV = end vertebraSSEP = somatosensory evoked potentialsMEP = motor evoked potentialsPJK = proximal junctional kyphosisSMA = spinal muscular atrophyCP = cerebral palsyPACU = post-anesthesia care unit.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: JBJS Essential Surgical Techniques (JBJS EST) is the premier journal describing how to perform orthopaedic surgical procedures, verified by evidence-based outcomes, vetted by peer review, while utilizing online delivery, imagery and video to optimize the educational experience, thereby enhancing patient care.
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