| Literature DB >> 22888418 |
Rohan R Lall1, Zachary A Smith, Albert P Wong, Daniel Miller, Richard G Fessler.
Abstract
The rapid expansion of minimally invasive techniques for corpectomy in the thoracic spine provides promise to redefine treatment options in this region. Techniques have evolved permitting anterior, lateral, posterolateral, and midline posterior corpectomy in a minimally invasive fashion. We review the numerous techniques that have been described, including thoracoscopy, tubular retraction, and various instrumentation techniques. Minimally invasive techniques are compared to their open predecessors from a technical and complication standpoint. Advantages and disadvantages of different approaches are also considered, with an emphasis on surgical strategies and nuance.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22888418 PMCID: PMC3409553 DOI: 10.1155/2012/213791
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Minim Invasive Surg ISSN: 2090-1445
Advantages and limitations of various minimally invasive approaches.
| MIS approach | Selected authors | Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anterior (thoracoscopic) | Dickman et al. | Complete decompression of canal | Pleural entry/chest tube |
| Mack et al. | Easy graft insertion | Ventral to dorsal working pattern | |
| Ragel et al. | Anterolateral screw-plate fixation | High complication rates | |
|
| |||
| Anterolateral (retropleural) | Uribe et al. | Complete decompression of canal | Extensive retropleural dissection |
| Scheufler et al. | Anterolateral screw-plate fixation | Difficult working angle | |
| Kasliwal et al. | Extra-coelomic working corridor | High rate of pleural violation | |
|
| |||
| Posterolateral (lateral extracavitary) | Kim et al. | Clear visualization of thecal sac | Significant blood loss/OR time |
| Khoo et al. | Anterior stabilization | Unilateral decompression | |
| Mussachio et al. | Preservation of posterior tension band | Second incision for percutaneous stabilization | |
|
| |||
| Posterior (transpedicular) | Chou et al. | Single incision | Difficult to place interbody graft |
| Deutsch et al. | Circumferential decompression | Thecal sac between surgeon and body | |
| Decreased blood loss/pain | Dorsal to ventral working pattern (aorta, etc.) | ||
Figure 124-year-old female who suffered a traumatic T9 fracture and underwent MIS lateral extracavitary T9 corpectomy with T7-T11 posterior segmental instrumentation—Sequential intraoperative and postoperative images ((a)–(f)).
Figure 2Cadaveric MIS lateral extracavitary corpectomy-coronal (a), and sagittal images of the plate (b) and cage (c) construct.
Figure 5Axial CT image in midthoracic spine demonstrating the trajectory used in the various minimally invasive approaches for corpectomy.
Figure 4Saw bones image with a K wire showing the localization point for MIS lateral extracavitary corpectomy. Relevant anatomy highlighted.
Figure 321-year-old who suffered a roll-over MVC and L4 burst fracture, and who underwent MIS lateral corpectomy: significant preoperative and postoperative images ((a)–(f)).