| Literature DB >> 25635637 |
Gazanfar Rahmathulla1, H Gordon Deen.
Abstract
The past 2 decades have seen a considerable increase in the number of lumbar spinal fusion surgeries. To enhance spinal stabilization and fusion, make the construct resistant to or stiffer for axial stress loading, lateral bending, and torsional stresses, cross-links and connectors were designed and included in a rod-screw construct. The authors present the case of a 49-year-old woman who presented 11 years after undergoing an L4-5 decompression and fusion in which a pedicle screw-rod construct with an integrated cross-link was designed to attach onto the pedicle screws. The patient's response at the time to the initial surgery was excellent; however, at the time of presentation 11 years later, she had significant postural headaches, severe neurogenic claudication, and radiculopathy. Imaging revealed canal compression across the instrumented levels and a possible thickened adherent filum terminale. Reexploration of the level revealed a large erosive dural defect with a CSF leak, spinal canal compression, and a thickened filum at the level of the cross-link. To the author's knowledge, such complications have not been reported in literature. The authors discuss this rare complication of spinal fusion and the need to avoid dural compression when cross-links are used.Entities:
Keywords: CSF leak; VAS = visual analog scale; cross-link; dural erosion; instrumentation; spinal fusion
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25635637 DOI: 10.3171/2014.9.SPINE14244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosurg Spine ISSN: 1547-5646