| Literature DB >> 33910320 |
Hong Jin Kim1, Jae Hyuk Yang2, Dong-Gune Chang1, Se-Il Suk1, Seung Woo Suh2, Sang-Il Kim3, Kwang-Sup Song4, Jong-Beom Park3, Woojin Cho5.
Abstract
Proximal junctional problems are among the potential complications of surgery for adult spinal deformity (ASD) and are associated with higher morbidity and increased rates of revision surgery. The diverse manifestations of proximal junctional problems range from proximal junctional kyphosis (PJK) to proximal junctional failure (PJF). Although there is no universally accepted definition for PJK, the most common is a proximal junctional angle greater than 10° that is at least 10° greater than the preoperative measurement. PJF represents a progression from PJK and is characterized by pain, gait disturbances, and neurological deficits. The risk factors for PJK can be classified according to patient-related, radiological, and surgical factors. Based on an understanding of the modifiable factors that contribute to reducing the risk of PJK, prevention strategies are critical for patients with ASD.Entities:
Keywords: Adult spinal deformity; Prevention strategies; Proximal junctional failure; Proximal junctional kyphosis; Proximal junctional problems
Year: 2021 PMID: 33910320 PMCID: PMC9260397 DOI: 10.31616/asj.2020.0574
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Asian Spine J ISSN: 1976-1902
Fig. 1Radiographs of a patient with proximal junctional kyphosis (PJK). Preoperative lateral radiograph of a 77-year-old woman with PJK showing proximal junction angle of 17.5° (A). Postoperative 3-month follow-up lateral radiograph after revision surgery from T10 to the sacrum (B).
Risk factors and clinical importance for PJK
| Risk factors | Clinical importance |
|---|---|
| Surgical considerations | |
| Approach related risk factors (extensive paraspinal muscle dissection at the UIV, disruption of the PLC including the supraspinous and interspinous ligaments, facet violation) |
It can cause weakening of the paravertebral muscles, resulting in increased stress in UIV and UIV+1. PLC damage or facet joint damage can cause instability of the vertebral body, and this instability of the vertebral body increases the load on the surrounding vertebral bodies including UIV [ |
| Combined anterior and posterior approach |
There is still no clear explanation for why a clear combined approach increases the prevalence of PJK [ However, if the vertebral body is fused too rigidly through anteroposterior fusion, it is possible that this fusion induces natural kyphosis at the proximal junction. |
| Rigidity of construct (all-pedicle screw insertion, fusion to the sacrum) |
If surgery is performed using screws, it may cause too rigid fixation and increase the stress on the UIV. In the process of inserting the pedicle screw, the risk of muscle, ligament, and facet joint damage may increase, and the process of inserting the pedicle screw may increase the risk of weakening of the vertebral body and compression fracture [ There is still debate on whether pelvic fixation affects the occurrence of PJK [ |
| Choice of the UIV |
The choice of the UIV also appears to have important biomechanical consequences that may affect the development of PJK [ A lower number of levels fused (i.e., 8 versus 11) and were more likely to have a UIV in the lower thoracic spine due to stress concentration on UIV. |
| Material property of rod | In the case of cobalt chrome rods with high mechanical stiffness, it is reported that the incidence of PJK is higher than that of titanium rods. This is reported to be due to the increase in vertebral body strength and the concentration of UIV stresses due to the use of cobalt chrome rods. |
| Radiological considerations | |
| Preoperative sagittal malalignment |
(1) Preoperative sagittal malalignment was found to be significantly associated with PJK risk, including smaller preoperative LL, larger preoperative PT, smaller LL–TK, larger PI–LL, larger preoperative SVA, and GSA (TK+LL+PI) [ (2) PJK occurs in patients with sagittal malalignment, verifying the theory that PJK might be a compensatory mechanism for sagittal balance [ |
| Overcorrection of sagittal alignment |
(3) Greater correction of PJA, lumbar lordosis, and SVA were identified as risk factors for PJK [ (4) If an ASD patient underwent extensive correction surgery, resulting in sagittal overcorrection such as a larger correction of LL and SVA, the postoperative alignment may not be anatomically sustainable as the body tends to balance itself in all three dimensions with minimal energy expenditure according to Dubousset’s conus of economy. With an overcorrected sagittal profile would unconsciously generate compensatory mechanisms to realign the sagittal profile, which are commonly limited to the unfused segments. Therefore, PJK occurs and PJA (angle between UIV and UIV-2) increases as a compensatory mechanism to maintain sagittal balance [ |
| Patient-specific considerations | |
| Severe proximal disc degeneration | In the case of intervertebral disc degeneration and degeneration, spinal instability is likely to occur. In this case, postural PJK is likely to occur, and stress that causes kyphosis is easily concentrated in the vertebral body. |
| Compression fracture at the most instrumented vertebra | As the vertebral body is deformed due to a fracture, it is easy to cause stress concentration that only occurs after the spine. |
| Weakness of bone quality (i.e., osteopenia or osteoporosis) | There is a mechanical vulnerability of vertebral body, and PJK or PJF is likely to occur due to compression fracture [ |
| Age and BMI |
It is interpreted that the incidence of PJK increases in the elderly due to age-dependent osteoporosis and co-morbidity. Degeneration and muscular atrophy by aging expressed more PJK [ The link between BMI and the development of PJK is less clear [ |
PJK, proximal junctional kyphosis; UIV, uppermost instrumented vertebrae; PLC, posterior ligament complex; LL, lumbar lordosis; PT, pelvic tilt; TK, thoracic kyphosis; PI, pelvic incidence; SVA, sagittal vertical axis; GSA, global sagittal alignment; PJA, proximal junctional angle; ASD, adult spinal deformity; PJF, proximal junctional failure; BMI, body mass index.