| Literature DB >> 23804144 |
Takao Yasuhara1, Yuichi Takahashi, Shinji Kumamoto, Masayuki Nakahara, Kotaro Yoneda, Tatsuomi Niimura, Takashi Tanoue, Akira Kusumegi, Takashi Sennari, Yasukazu Hijikata, Hiroaki Manabe, Yasuyuki Miyoshi, Isao Date, Koichi Ogawa, Kenki Nishida.
Abstract
Some cases with lumbar degenerative diseases require multi-level fusion surgeries. At our institute, 27 and 4 procedures of 3- and 4-level fusion were performed out of a total 672 posterior lumbar interfusions (PLIFs) on patients with lumbar degenerative disease from 2005 to 2010. We present 2 osteoporotic patients who developed proximal vertebral body fracture after 4-level fusion. Both cases presented with gait disability for leg pain by degenerative lumbar scoliosis and canal stenosis at the levels of L1/2-4/5. After 4-level fusion using L1 as the upper instrumented vertebra, proximal vertebral body fractures were found along with the right pedicle fractures of L1 in both cases. One of these patients, aged 82 years, was treated as an outpatient using a hard corset for 24 months, but the fractures were exacerbated over time. In the other patient, posterolateral fusion was extended from Th10 to L5. Both patients can walk alone and have been thoroughly followed up. In both cases, the fracture of the right L1 pedicle might be related to the subsequent fractures and fusion failure. In consideration of multi-level fusion, L1 should be avoided as an upper instrumented vertebra to prevent junctional kyphosis, especially in cases with osteoporosis and flat back posture.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23804144 DOI: 10.18926/AMO/50414
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Med Okayama ISSN: 0386-300X Impact factor: 0.892