Literature DB >> 18976178

Anterior approach to thoracic and lumbar spine lesions: results in 145 consecutive cases.

Giuseppe D'Aliberti1, Giuseppe Talamonti, Fabio Villa, Alberto Debernardi, Cosimo Vincenzo Sansalone, Andrea LaMaida, Massimo Torre, Massimo Collice.   

Abstract

OBJECT: The authors report on a series of 145 consecutive patients with different types of spine lesions surgically treated via an anterior approach (AA) at the thoracic and lumbar levels during the past 10 years. Indications, techniques, and surgical results are described.
METHODS: This series included 92 patients with fractures, 30 with neoplasms, 13 with thoracic disc hernias, and 10 with spinal infections. Based on the lesion to be addressed, the AA was used for lesion excision, corpectomy, vertebral body reconstruction with cages, realignment, and/or plating or screwing. The approach was extracavitary in 55 patients and intracavitary in 90. In 126 patients (86.8%), neural decompression and spine stabilization were achieved via a stand-alone AA (SA-AA), whereas 19 patients (13.1%) were treated using a 2-stage anteroposterior approach. This circumferential approach was reserved for select cases of severe traumatic dislocation, particular types of tumors, or specific anatomical locations. The authors developed a simple neuronavigation-based method of identifying the severely injured patients who were eligible for the SA-AA by evaluating the angle of lateral dislocation.
RESULTS: There were no deaths and no instances of major surgery-related morbidity. Minor morbidity was almost always transitory and was reported in 13 patients (8.9%). Neurological improvement was reported in 20% of injured patients with a preoperative incomplete lesion. Postoperatively, all patients were able to stand or at least sit without load pain. During the follow-up (mean +/- standard deviation 3.8 +/- 2.4 years), there were no cases of failure, fracture, dislocation, or bending of the anterior instrumentation, and the rate of pseudarthrosis was 0%.
CONCLUSION: The anterior route provides direct access to most spine diseases and allows optimal neural decompression and the possibility of adequate realignment and strong reconstruction/fixation. Stability of the vertebral column is achieved, resolution of clinical pain is rapid and almost complete, and the rate of surgical complications is very low. The authors assert that the SA-AA offers so many advantages and has such good results that the 2-stage anteroposterior approach can be reserved for a minority of select cases and that the time for using the posterior approach alone is over.

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Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18976178     DOI: 10.3171/SPI.2008.9.11.466

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosurg Spine        ISSN: 1547-5646


  8 in total

1.  The anterior stand-alone approach (ASAA) during the acute phase of spondylodiscitis: results in 40 consecutively treated patients.

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Journal:  Eur Spine J       Date:  2012-03-10       Impact factor: 3.134

2.  Paediatric spinal Langerhans cell histiocytosis requiring corpectomy and fusion at C7 and at Th8-Th9 levels.

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Journal:  Neurosurg Rev       Date:  2013-04-09       Impact factor: 3.042

4.  Posterior approach to ventrally located spinal meningiomas.

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Journal:  Eur Spine J       Date:  2010-02-03       Impact factor: 3.134

5.  Simultaneously anterior decompression and posterior instrumentation by extrapleural retroperitoneal approach in thoracolumbar lesions.

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6.  Short-segment decompression and fixation for thoracolumbar osteoporotic fractures with neurological deficits.

Authors:  Cheng-Li Lin; Po-Hsin Chou; Jing-Jing Fang; Kuo-Yuan Huang; Ruey-Mo Lin
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7.  Minimally invasive corpectomy and percutaneous transpedicular stabilization in the treatment of patients with unstable injures of the thoracolumbar spine: Results of retrospective case series.

Authors:  Vadim A Byvaltsev; Andrei A Kalinin; Roman A Polkin; Valerii V Shepelev; Marat A Aliyev; Yermek K Dyussembekov
Journal:  J Craniovertebr Junction Spine       Date:  2021-09-08

8.  Minimally Invasive Lateral Corpectomy of the Thoracolumbar Spine: A Case Series of 20 Patients.

Authors:  Hai Le; Joshua Barber; Eileen Phan; Richard K Hurley; Yashar Javidan
Journal:  Global Spine J       Date:  2020-08-05
  8 in total

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