| Literature DB >> 18538019 |
Christoph-E Heyde1, Johannes K Fakler, Erik Hasenboehler, Philip F Stahel, Thilo John, Yohan Robinson, Sven K Tschoeke, Ralph Kayser.
Abstract
Patients with ankylosing spondylitis are at significant risk for sustaining cervical spine injuries following trauma predisposed by kyphosis, stiffness and osteoporotic bone quality of the spine. The risk of sustaining neurological deficits in this patient population is higher than average. The present review article provides an outline on the specific injury patterns in the cervical spine, diagnostic algorithms and specific treatment modalities dictated by the underlying disease in patients with ankylosing spondylitis. An emphasis is placed on the risks and complication patterns in the treatment of these rare, but challenging injuries.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18538019 PMCID: PMC2453107 DOI: 10.1186/1754-9493-2-15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Saf Surg ISSN: 1754-9493
The modified "New-York-Criteria" [1,5].
| Lower back pain and stiffness for more than 3 months with improvement after exercise, but not with rest |
| Reduced motility of the lumbar spine in the sagittal and frontal axis |
| Restriction of the chest expansion (age and gender related) |
| Sacroiliitis at least grade 2 bilateral or grade 3–4 ipsilateral |
Hehne und Zielke classification in ankylosing spondylitis [9].
| Dorsal ossification | Simple ossification of the dorsal spine bodies, no syndesmophytes | Spondylathritis type | |
| Incomplete anular ossification | Tender, the anulus fibrosus ventrally with or without lateral syndesmophytes, without overlapping of the vertebral bodies (incomplete) | Anulus-type | |
| Complete anular ossification | As type IIa, but with syndesmophytes overlapping the vertebral disc (complete) | Anulus-type | |
| Partial ostotic ossification | Thick and wide syndesmophytes, often with cortical- and spongiosa structure, corresponding the bamboo-type, but not present in all segments (incomplete) | Ligament/sub-ligament type | |
| Total ostotic ossification | As type IIIa, but several thoracic and lumbar segments are affected | Bamboo-spine |
Fracture classification in ankylosing spondylitis according to Metz-Stavenhagen et al. [12].
| Complex fracture pattern involving anterior and posterior – bony and ligamentous structures of the spine at the level of injury | |
| Consecutive sintering |
Figure 1X-Ray's in standard plain show a reduced view of the lower cervical spine and of the cervico-thoracic junction. Furthermore, an accurate evaluation is difficult due to the ossification and osteoporosis.
Figure 2The CT 2-D reconstruction shows a thin fracture line in a completely but not dislocated fracture at C6/7.
Key studies related to surgical stabilization of cervical spine fractures in ankylosing spondylitis.
| Olerud et al. [16] | 1996 | Retrospective case series | 17 | ? | Anterior and posterior stabilisation | ? |
| Taggard & Traynelis [23] | 2000 | Prospective case series | 7 | 3 | Posterior | All survivors with solid fusion after 3 months |
| Guo et al. [45] | 2004 | Retrospective case series | 11 | 8 | Anterior and posterior | All survivors with fusion at final follow-up |
| Cornefjord et al. [21] | 2005 | Retrospective case series | 19 | 8 | Posterior and combined | Fusion in all patients |
| Zdichawski et al. [3] | 2005 | Retrospective multicentric case series | 19 | ? | Anterior, posterior, and combined | 3 cases with implant failure (all cases anterior-only) |
| Payer [46] | 2006 | Retrospective case series | 4 | 2 | Anterior, posterior and combined | Fusion in all survivors |
| Einsiedel et al. [14] | 2006 | Retrospective multicentric case series | 37 | 36 | Anterior, posterior and combined | 5 cases with early implant failure (all cases anterior only) |
Figure 3Positioning of a patient with ankylosing spondylitis on the surgical table is technical demanding.
Figure 4Same case of a 64 years old patient showed in figure 1 and 2. A one-time ventro-dorsal surgery was performed, with ventral plating and a dorsal instrumentation.
Figure 5A 44 years old patient with ankylosing spondylitis and a complete fracture of C 3/4 and partial dislocation (panels a, b and c).
Figure 6Same case of the patient showed in figure 5. A well reduced cervical spine is visible after a one-stage ventro-dorsal spondylodesis and ventral cage implantation for a defect.