| Literature DB >> 23927056 |
Peter Diel, Christoph Röder, Gosia Perler, Thomas Vordemvenne, Matti Scholz, Frank Kandziora, Sebastian Fürderer, Soren Eiskjaer, Gianluca Maestretti, Robert Rotter, Lorin Michael Benneker, Paul Friedhelm Heini.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Up to one third of BKP treated cases shows no appreciable height restoration due to loss of both restored height and kyphotic realignment after balloon deflation. This shortcoming has called for an improved method that maintains the height and realignment reached by the fully inflated balloon until stabilization of the vertebral body by PMMA-based cementation. Restoration of the physiological vertebral body height for pain relief and for preventing further fractures of adjacent and distant vertebral bodies must be the main aim for such a method. A new vertebral body stenting system (VBS) stabilizes the vertebral body after balloon deflation until cementation. The radiographic and safety results of the first 100 cases where VBS was applied are presented.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23927056 PMCID: PMC3751159 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-14-233
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Figure 1Beck Index (BI) and Alternative Beck Index in different fracture types. BI Crush fractures: Ant Height/Post Height. BI Wedge fractures: Ant Height/Post Height. Alternative BI biconcave fractures: Ant Height/Mid Height
Reintervention/revision procedures and indications
| Revision | Neurocompression with recurrence of pain | 3 |
| New intervention | New adjacent fracture(s) | 4 |
| New intervention | New remote facture(s) | 4 |
| Revision & new intervention | Neurocompression and new adjacent fracture | 1 |
Patient and fracture characteristics of cases with and without new fractures
| Age (mean) | 76 (69–88) yrs | 69 (35–91) yrs | 0.322 |
| Gender (% female) | 81.8% | 48% | 0.036* |
| LKA preop (mean) | 16° (46°-1°) | 12.6° (50°-0°) | 0.687 |
| LKA postop (mean) | 10° (15°-1°) | 8.7°(27°- 0°) | 0.471 |
| Intradiscal extrusions | 0% | 11.8% | n.a |
*significant difference.
Figure 2Case presentation. This 63 years old female presents after a minor car accident. Clinically the patient presents with right sided leg pain as soon as she gets up, however motor function is ok. The imaging studies depict an atypical fracture of L4 (Figure 2a), with an impression of the lower endplate. Obviously there is a foraminal stenosis at L4-L5 which provokes the leg pain. Because of the neurologic symptoms a surgical treatment was advocated. Instead of an open intervention a stentoplasty procedure was performed. The correction achieved is well visible by the intra- and postoperative pictures (dashed lines, Figure 2b). Compared to preoperatively the postoperative CT scan confirms an important correction that could be achieved by the stent and the well performed cement augmentation that stabilizes the vertebral body (Figures 2c,d).
Pre- and postoperative height of vertebral bodies with wedge fractures
| anterior | 20.7/20.0 | 63.0/60.7 | 23.8/24.5 | 73.9/79.6 | 0.019/0.039 |
| middle | 19.7/18.5 | 64.2/62.3 | 25.2/23.3 | 84.9/84.5 | <0.0001/0.023 |
| posterior | 29/27.5 | 88.3/85.0 | 31.7/30.7 | 98.6/100.7 | 0.008/ 0.312* |
*not significant.
Pre- and postoperative height of vertebral bodies with crush fractures
| anterior | 20.1/18.4 | 60.8/54.1 | 25.1/23.6 | 81.5/82.2 | <0.0001/<0.0001 |
| middle | 17.5/16.1 | 58.4/53.6 | 25.1/ 23.7 | 87.6/90.7 | <0.0001/<0.0001 |
| posterior | 27.3/25.0 | 85.4/79.5 | 29.9/27.9 | 97.2/99.8 | 0.019/0.012 |
Pre- and postoperative height of vertebral bodies with biconcave fractures
| anterior | 20.6/21.3 | 62.6/60.7 | 23.6/24.1 | 78.3/77.7 | 0.023/0.127* |
| middle | 15.6/15.3 | 54.6/52.5 | 22.6/22.6 | 80.0/79.4 | 0.002/0.016 |
| posterior | 28.6/28.7 | 89.9/89.5 | 30.2/30.1 | 95.5/94.9 | 0.549*/0.643* |
*not significant.
Figure 3Authentic relations of reference heights and mean group heights (mm) for the three fracture types (as classified by the treating surgeon). Images scaled but downsized.
Figure 5Maximum-minimum-average scenarios of pre- to postoperative Beck-Index improvement.