54 results on '"Stulík J"'
Search Results
2. Moderní techniky MR zobrazení u roztroušené sklerózy.
- Author
-
Keřkovský, M., Stulík, J., Obhlídalová, I., Praksová, P., Bednařík, J., Dostál, M., Kuhn, M., Šprláková-Puková, A., and Mechl, M.
- Abstract
Magnetic resonance imag ing (MRI) is cur rently a key component of multiple sclerosis dia gnostics. In addition to conventional techniques, based on the evaluat ion of the number and localization of visible brain and spinal cord lesions, in recent years we have seen a rapid development of new MRI techniques provid ing new quantitative bio markers which better characterize pathological structural changes in central nervous system tis sues occur r ing due to a demyelinat ing dis ease. This article sum marizes new trends in MRI dia gnostics of multiple sclerosis in terms of the technical foundations of diff erent methods, pos sibilities for data analysis and their practical use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Ložisková amyloidóza v dutině nosní.
- Author
-
Koukalová, R., Szturz, P., Svobodová, I., Stulík, J., and Řehák, Z.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. [Localized Amyloidosis Involving the Nasal Cavity].
- Author
-
Koukalová R, Szturz P, Svobodová I, Stulík J, and Řehák Z
- Subjects
- Female, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Humans, Middle Aged, Nasal Cavity, Positron-Emission Tomography, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Amyloidosis diagnosis, Nose Diseases diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Amyloidosis is a disease characterized by deposits of abnormal protein known as amyloid in various organs and tissues. It can be classified into systemic or localized forms, the latter of which is less frequent. Deposition of amyloidogenic monoclonal light chains leads to the most common type of this disease called light-chain (AL) amyloidosis. (18)F-FDG positron emission tomography/ computed tomography hybrid imaging (FDG-PET/ CT) demonstrates tracer uptake usually in all patients with localized amyloidosis as opposed to the systemic form., Case: Herein, we present a case of an otherwise healthy 56-year-old women diagnosed with a nasal polyp on the right side. The biopsy results were consistent with amyloidosis. FDG-PET/ CT imaging revealed a pathological, metabolically active lesion measuring 11 × 9 mm with a maximum standardized uptake value (SUV(max)) of 3.47. No other distant pathological changes were identified. After a radical resection, the patient has been regularly followed-up with clinical and imaging methods (MRI, FDG-PET/ CT), both of which repeatedly showed normal findings with disease-free survival of 27 months. Thus, FDG-PET/ CT imaging plays an important role not only for obtaining the right diagnosis but also in the follow-up of patients after surgical resection. In accordance with the literature, this case report confirms that FDG-PET/ CT imaging holds promise as an auxiliary method for distinguishing between localized and systemic forms of amyloidosis.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. [A rare case of multiple myeloma: multiple solitary plasmacytomas of distal extremities].
- Author
-
Hrabovský Š, Řehák Z, Stulík J, Prášek J, and Mayer J
- Subjects
- Aged, Extremities, Humans, Male, Multiple Myeloma diagnosis, Multiple Myeloma therapy, Plasmacytoma diagnosis, Plasmacytoma therapy
- Abstract
This article describes a case of 68-years-old male with very atypic variation of multiple myeloma occuring as multifocal osteolysis limited to tibiae, cuboid bone, radius and ulna, in the absence of diffuse bone marrow infiltration. The main goal of this article is to point out the importance of permanent awareness during diagnostics and treatment of this insidious disease.
- Published
- 2015
6. [Axial lumbar interbody fusion: prospective monocentric study].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Adámek S, Barna M, Kaspříková N, Polanecký O, and Kryl J
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Humans, Lumbar Vertebrae diagnostic imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Obesity complications, Prospective Studies, Radiography, Sacrum diagnostic imaging, Spinal Stenosis complications, Spinal Stenosis diagnostic imaging, Spondylolisthesis complications, Spondylolisthesis diagnostic imaging, Spondylosis complications, Spondylosis diagnostic imaging, Young Adult, Lumbar Vertebrae surgery, Sacrum surgery, Spinal Fusion methods, Spinal Stenosis surgery, Spondylolisthesis surgery, Spondylosis surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate clinical and radiographic results in the patients who underwent L5-S1 fixation using the technique of percutaneous lumbar interbody fusion (AxiaLIF)., Material: The study comprised 23 patients, 11 women and 12 men, who ranged from age of 21 to 63 years, with an average of 48.2 years. In all patients surgical posterior stabilisation involving the L5-S1 segment had previously been done. The initial indications for surgery were L5-S1 spondylolisthesis in 20 and L5-S1 spondylosis and stenosis in three patients., Methods: The AxiaLIF technique for L5-S1 fixation was indicated in overweight patients and in those after repeated abdominal or retroperitoneal surgery. A suitable position and shape of the sacrum or lumbosacral junction was another criterion. The patients were evaluated between 26 and 56 months (average, 40.4 months) after primary surgery and, on the basis of CT and radiographic findings, bone union and lumbosacral junction stability were assessed. The clinical outcome was investigated using the ODI and VAS systems and the results were statistically analysed by the Wilcoxon test for paired samples with statistical significance set at a level of 0.05., Results: The average VAS value was 6.6 before surgery and, after surgery, 5.2 at three months, 4.2 at six months, 3.1 at one year, 2.9 at two years and 2.1 at three years (n=18). At two post-operative years, improvement in the VAS value by 56.1% was recorded. The average pre-operative ODI value was 25.1; the post-operative values were 17.0 at six months, 12.3 at one year, 10.6 at two years and 8.2 at three years (n=18). At two years after surgery the ODI value improved by 57.8%. To the question concerning their willingness to undergo, with acquired experience, surgery for the same diagnosis, 21 patients (91.3%) gave an affirmative answer. Neither screw breakage nor neurovascular damage or rectal injury was found. CT scans showed complete interbody bone fusion in 22 of the 23 patients (95.6%), In one patient the finding was not clear. Also, posterolateral fusion was achieved in all but one patients (95.6%). A stable L5-S1 segment was found in all patients at all follow-up intervals. The improvement in both VAS and ODI values was statistically significant., Discussion: In addition to indications usual in degenerative disc disease, overweight patients, those who had repeated trans- or retroperitoneal surgery in the L5-S1 region or who underwent long posterior fixation to stabilise the caudal margin of instrumentation are indicated for the AxiaLIF procedure. The clinical results of our study are in agreement with the conclusions of other studies and are similar to the outcomes of surgery using other types of fusion or dynamic stabilisation for this diagnosis. The high rate of fusion in our group is affected by use of a rigid transpedicular fixator together with posterolateral arthrodesis. On the other hand, no negative effects of only synthetic bone applied to interbody space were recorded., Conclusions: The percutaneous axial pre-sacral approach to the L5-S1 interbody space with application of a double-treaded screw is another option for the management of this much strained segment. The technique is useful particularly when contraindications for conventional surgical procedures are present in patients with anatomical anomalies, in overweight patients or in those who have had repeated surgery in the region. Clinical outcomes and the success rate for L5-S1 bone fusion are comparable with conventional techniques. Complications are rare but their treatment is difficult.
- Published
- 2014
7. [Unstable injuries to the upper cervical spine in children and adolescents].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Nesnídal P, Kryl J, Vyskočil T, and Barna M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Atlanto-Axial Joint injuries, Cervical Vertebrae surgery, Child, Female, Humans, Joint Dislocations therapy, Male, Orthopedic Procedures, Spinal Fractures therapy, Cervical Vertebrae injuries, Spinal Fractures surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: Injuries to the upper cervical spine in children are rare and account for 0.6 to 9.5% of all cervical spine injuries. We present a detailed analysis of the children and adolescents with unstable upper cervical spine injuries treated at our spinal centre., Material: During 16 years of follow-up, unstable injury to the upper cervical spine was recorded in 23 children and adolescents. Two patients (8.7%) were treated conservatively and 21 (91.3%) underwent surgery. The patients were allocated by age to three groups: 0-9 year, 10-14 year and 15-18 year categories. Twenty patients were seen at the final clinical and radiographic follow-up. One patient died at 62 months after surgery and two patients unfit for transport were evaluated on the basis of mailed interviews. The interval between injury and final evaluation ranged from 6 to 137 months, with an average of 53.4 months., Methods: The patients treated conservatively first wore a Philadelphia collar, then a custom-made brace, and eventually a soft Schanze cervical collar to finish the healing process. Application of a halo vest was considered a surgical procedure and was used only in very small children. In unstable odontoid fractures, direct osteosynthesis with two cannulated titanium screws was performed from the anterior approach in older children while, in small children, transoral or submandibular retropharyngeal decompression to treat spinal stenosis caused by bone fragments was carried out and a halo vest was applied. Hangman's fractures were treated by anterior cervical discectomy, fusion with bone graft and anterior plate fixation. The other types of unstable fractures were managed from the posterior approach by occipitocervical fixation, atlantoaxial fixation or instrumented fusion extended caudally. The patients characteristics included gender, age, mechanism of injury, type of injury, neurological findings, type of therapy or surgery, complications and treatment outcome. Neurological status was evaluated using the Frankel classification., Results: The patient group comprised 14 boys (60.9%) and nine girls (39.1%), which gave a gender ratio of 3 : 2. The age of patients at injury ranged from 2 to 18 years, with an average of 11 years and 6 months. The most frequent injuries included rotational or vertical atlantoaxial dislocation in eight (34.8%) and odontoid fractures in seven (30.4%) patients; atlas fracture was recorded in three (13.0%) and hangman's fracture also in three (13.0%) patients; occipitocervical displacement was found in one (4.3%) and complex atlantoaxial fracture also in one patient (4.3%). At the time of injury, 17 patients (73.9%) had no neurological deficit (Frankel grade E), three had Frankel grade A (one paraplegic with a concomitant T5 spinal cord injury) and three had Frankel grade D neurological deficits. Of the six patients with neurological deficit, two showed improvement by one or two Frankel grades. The method of dorsal atlantoaxial fixation was used in eight patients (Magerl fixation in 2 and Harms method in 6). Direct osteosynthesis of an odontoid fracture was performed in four patients, halo fixation was applied in four, C2-C3 discectomy with tricortical bone grafting and plating was carried out in three, occipitocervical fixation was used in three patients, and direct atlas osteosynthesis, simple decompression and simple non-instrumented dorsal spondylodesis each was performed in one patient. Neither intra-operative complications nor post-operative complications related to the surgical technique were recorded. Osteoarthritis or bone non-union, as late post-operative complications, were found in two patients. All other patients showed bone healing by first intention in the desired extent. Superficial or deep wound infections were not recorded., Discussion: In the first age category, the number of boys and girls with injuries to the upper cervical spine was equal while, in the third one, the boys outnumbered the girls more than twice. Of the 23 patients, 91.3% were surgically treated; the anterior approach was used in approximately one third of the patients and the posterior approach in the rest of them. The high number of surgical interventions is due to the fact that the most serious paediatric spinal injuries are referred to our centre., Conclusions: 1. Injuries to the upper cervical spine are most frequently found in the youngest children and in adolescents who, however, frequently have injury also to the lower cervical spine. 2. Neurological deficit is relatively frequent but has a better prognosis than in adults. The youngest children with mild deficits have the best prognosis. 3. The mortality rate in young children with upper cervical spine injuries is evidently high, mostly due to associated head, chest and abdomen trauma 4. Therapy, particularly in small children, is strictly individual.
- Published
- 2013
8. [Surgical treatment for atlantoaxial osteoarthritis (AAOA): a prospective study of twenty-seven patients].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Barna M, and Kryl J
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Osteoarthritis, Spine diagnosis, Spinal Fusion, Atlanto-Axial Joint, Osteoarthritis, Spine surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: Atlantoaxial osteoarthritis (AAOA) is a clinical syndrome with signs distinctly different from those of degenerative sub - axial spine disease. Its diagnosis may long be delayed, partly because of insufficient knowledge and partly due to difficulties in interpreting both anteroposterior and lateral radiographs. The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate the first 27 AAOA patients treated at our department., Material: From 2001 we performed atlantoaxial fixation with fusion in a total of 29 patients with painful arthritis of the atlanto axial complex. The 27 patients treated before the end of 2010 were enrolled in the study and analysed in detail. This group included 13 women and 14 men aged between 35 and 72 years, with an average age of 53.5 years. In all patients atlanto - axial fixation was performed using the polyaxial screw-rod system according to Harms., Methods: The patients were followed up at 6 and 12 weeks, 6 and 12 months and then once a year after surgery. X-ray examinations were done at the same intervals as clinical examinations; functional radiographs were made at 12 to 14 weeks after surgery. The definitive analysis of the group was made in the range of 4 to 59 months (average, 25.7 months) after the primary operation. Patients' subjective evaluation was based on NPDI and VAS scores and a question of whether the patient would undergo the surgery again. Objective evaluation included clinical outcomes - pain and neurological findings; radiographic results - stability and healing of C1-C2 fusion; and complications during surgery and in early and late postoperative periods. As intra-operative complications were regarded those associated with the surgical approach, nerve injury and vertebral artery injury. Early post-operative complications included poor wound healing and changes in the patient's neurological status, late complications included instrumentation failure and infection. Patients' clinical status (NPDI, VAS) was statistically evaluated using the one-way ANOVA., Results: The mean VAS score was pre-operatively 7.0 and post-operatively 5.6 at 3 months, 5.0 at 6 months, 5.1 at 1 year; 3.9 at 2 years and 4.0 at 3 years. The mean NPDI value was pre-operatively 39.6 and post-operatively 38.7 at 3 months, 36.0 at 6 months, 34.5 at 1 year, 34.3 at 2 years and 33.1 at 3 years. The question of willingness to undergo the same operation again was answered in the affirmative by 21 patients (77.8%), in the negative by five (18.5%) and one patient did not know (3.7%). Complete bone fusion, as assessed by radiography or CT scanning, was achieved in 26 out of 27 patients (96.3%). In one patient the result was ambiguous but, at 3 months as well as the next follow-ups, C1-C2 complex stability was found., Discussion: All patients in our group underwent a unified system of clinical, radiological, CT and MRI examination. In the decision-making process, emphasis was placed on a correlation of clinical findings with CT scanning results. All patients were operated on from the posterior approach using the Harms method, and radiological outcomes were similar to those of Grob et al. who used the Magerl's technique of C1-C2 fixation. The VAS and NPDI scores demonstrated significant improvement as early as 3 post-operative months, with still further improvement in the following period. The stable clinical status of the patients was achieved at 2 years after surgery. From the practical standpoint we were interested in an answer to the question of whether the patients would be willing to undergo the procedure again. Almost 80% of affirmative answers testified to the correct choice of treatment. The values found corresponded to those reported by Grob at al., Conclusions: Patients with painful osteoarthritis refractory to conservative treatment will benefit from atlantoaxial fixation and fusion. For the patient, restricted cervical rotation is acceptable in return for pain relief. From the surgical point of view, the risk of complications associated with the operative technique did not exceed a tolerable rate.
- Published
- 2012
9. [Metatropic dysplasia as the cause of atlantoaxial instability, spinal stenosis and myelopathy: case report and literature review].
- Author
-
Barna M, Stulík J, and Fencl F
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Dwarfism diagnostic imaging, Humans, Joint Dislocations diagnostic imaging, Male, Osteochondrodysplasias diagnostic imaging, Radiography, Spinal Stenosis diagnostic imaging, Spinal Stenosis etiology, Atlanto-Axial Joint diagnostic imaging, Atlanto-Axial Joint surgery, Dwarfism complications, Joint Dislocations etiology, Osteochondrodysplasias complications
- Abstract
We present the case of a patient, aged 4 years and 10 months, with metatropic dysplasia. The baby had repeated apnoeic episodes, bradycardia and cardiac arrests and was diagnosed with foramen magnum stenosis and atlantodental dislocation. The episodes were markedly associated with neck movements. Considering this clinical presentation, we performed laminectomy of the atlas, foramen magnum enlargement and decompression followed by dorsal C0-C2 stabilisa - tion with allogeneic bone chips. After the operation, apnoeic episodes did not recur.
- Published
- 2012
10. [Spinal cord concussion: a retrospective study of twenty-four patients].
- Author
-
Nesnídal P, Stulík J, and Barna M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Prognosis, Young Adult, Nervous System Diseases etiology, Spinal Cord Injuries complications
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: Spinal cord concussion is characterised as fully reversible, temporary inhibition of conductive function due to trauma, without signs of structural changes. Although neurological deficit is usually related to the severity of spinal injury, this is different in spinal cord concussion. The aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate a group of 24 patients with spinal cord concussion, to design a diagnostic algorithm and propose an effective therapy with a good prognosis for the patients., Material: We reviewed clinical records of 9 768 patients hospitalised at the Department of Spinal Surgery, University Hospital in Motol, from September 2002 till December 2010, and of 457 patients treated at other departments of the Hospital between January 2008 and December 2010; this was a total of 10 225 patients. The data were retrospectively analysed and only the patients with a clear history of trauma and subsequent conservative therapy were selected to comprise a group characterised by the generally known criteria of spinal cord concussion: (1) spinal injury with immediate neurological deficit of varying degree; (2) neurological deficit corresponding to the level of spinal injury; (3) recovery of neurological function within 72 hours of injury; (4) no morphological evidence of injury to the spinal structures obtained by imaging methods. This group comprised 24 patients., Methods: The patients were followed up from 6 to 95 months, with a mean of 46 months and a median of 48 months, at intervals of 6 and 12 weeks and 6 and 12 months after injury, and then every following year. The recorded information included the patient's age at the time of injury, their gender, the mechanism of injury, reports on alcohol consumption, the first detected neurological deficit, its development immediately after injury, during the hospital stay and at follow-ups in the out-patient department, methylprednisolone administration according to the National Acute Spinal Cord Injury Study (NASCIS) 2, and findings of imaging methods, particularly MRI., Results: Our group consisted of 22 men (91.7%) and two women (8.3%), with an average age of 29 years; the average age was 30 years in men and 18.5 years in women. Seven patients (29.2%) were younger than 18 years, with an average of 16.14 years; the remaining 17 patients (70.8%) were older than 18 years, with an average of 34.35 years. The major mechanisms of injury included falls from a height in 10 patients (41.7%) and injury due to alcohol consumption in five patients (20.1%). Clinical findings involved lesions of the medullary cone in 12 (50.0%), cervical spinal cord in seven (29.2%) and thoracic spinal cord in five (20.8%) patients. Motor function deficit was present in all patients, of whom 10 (41.2%) showed a complete loss of motor function. Impaired sensory function was found in 21 (87.5%) patients. One patient had perianal and genital sensory deficit and one (4.2%) had urinary retention. Neither radiograms nor CT scans showed traumatic changes in any of the patients; MRI findings free of any traumatic spinal changes were recorded in 21 patients (87.5%). One patient had oedema of the T5 and T8 vertebral bodies. No complications were recorded. All patients experienced rapid resolution of neurological deficit, which occurred within 6 hours of injury in two (8.4%), within 12 hours in two (8.4%), within 24 hours in 12 (50.0%) and within 48 hours in six (25.0%) patients, and later than 48 hours after injury in two patients (8.4%). However, recovery always occurred within 72 hours of injury., Discussion: A good prognosis for patients with this injury is supported by our findings, because all patients experienced rapid resolution of neurological deficit within 72 hours of injury. This result is in agreement with the relevant international studies reporting no serious complications associated with spinal trauma. There are no clear recommendations for administration of high doses of methylprednisolone according to the NASCIS system., Conclusions: Spinal cord concussion is not a frequent injury; in our study, it accounted for 3.54% of the patients with trauma histories out of the total number of 678 patients, or for 2.40% out of 997 injured spinal levels. The first steps should be the same as in any other injury to the spinal cord. An early examination of the patient with imaging methods including MRI is of primary importance. At present administration of methylprednisolone according to the NASCIS system is disputable. The patient diagnosed with spinal cord concussion has a good prognosis, with rehabilitation as the main therapeutic approach.
- Published
- 2012
11. [ProDisc-C Total Disc Replacement. A four-year prospective monocentric study].
- Author
-
Barna M, Stulík J, Kryl J, Vyskočil T, and Nesnídal P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Cervical Vertebrae surgery, Total Disc Replacement adverse effects, Total Disc Replacement instrumentation, Total Disc Replacement methods
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: To present the results of an independent prospective monocentric study of patients with ProDisc-C Total Disc Replacement (CTDR) followed up for 4 years, and to analyse the most frequent late complications, in particular heterotopic ossification., Material: In the period from October 2004 to May 2006, a total of 61 patients underwent ProDisc-C CTDR involving one or two segments at the Department of Spinal Surgery, University Hospital in Motol. This study included 39 patients who were followed up for at least 4 years. With the exception of one patient operated on two segments, the patients were treated by ProDisc-C CTDR at one level., Methods: In the study, only the surgical procedure recommended by the implant manufacturer (Synthes, USA) was used and all operations were performed by a team with the same leading surgeon. Clinical assessment. The patients were examined before surgery, immediately after it and at 6 and 12 weeks and 6, 12, 24 and 48 months post-operatively. At each follow-up, responses to the questionnaire were obtained, and the patients' health status was evaluated on the basis of Neck Disability Index (NDI) and Visual Analogue Score (VAS) values for cervical spine and radicular pain, the use of analgesics and personal satisfaction Radiographic assessment. Pre- and post-operative radiographs were taken in antero-posterior and lateral projection, and flexion, extension and lateral bending films were obtained The height of the intervertebral disc space at the affected level was measured and range of motion in flexion and extension was evaluated together with the adjacent levels. In addition, subsidence, loosening, failure or displacement of the implant was assessed, as well as the presence of heterotopic ossification. The results were statistically analysed using Student's t-test., Results: The clinical results at 1, 2 and 4 years of follow-up were as follows: NDI values, 44.9 pre-operatively, 26.1, 25.8 and 25.1 post-operatively, improvement by 44.1% after 4 years; VAS for cervical spine pain, 5.8 pre-operatively, 3.0, 2.7 and 2.7 postoperatively, improvement after 4 years by 53.7%; VAS for radicular pain, 6.3 pre-operatively, 2.9, 2.9 and 2.7 postoperatively, improvement by 57.1% after 4 years. The radiographic findings showed the average intervertebral disc space height of 3.2 mm at the affected level before and 7.4 mm after surgery, with no significant change in the following period. The average range of disc motion at the affected level was 4.2 degrees before and 11.1 degrees after surgery, with 11.4 degrees at 4 years of follow-up. During that period, heterotopic ossification was recorded in 10 (25%) treated discs, with five of them (12.5%) classified as grade III or IV. Spontaneous fusion across the disc replacement level was found in three cases (7.5%). Two patients (5%) developed kyphosis at the affected disc level. The statistical analysis showed a significant difference between the pre-operative VAS values and those at 6 post-operative weeks for both cervical spine and radicular pain (t = 4.4 and t = 5.3, respectively; p < 0.05). No significant difference in VAS values was found between 6 weeks and 3 months after surgery for either condition (t = 1.69 and t = 0.3; p > 0.05). Changes in VAS values in the following period were minimal and non-significant. The differences in NDI values before surgery and at 6 weeks after it, and between 6 weeks and 3 months post-operatively were significant (t = 11, p < 0.05 and t = 3.8, p < 0.05, respectively). In the following period, changes in the values were minimal and non-significant., Discussion: Short-term studies on various types of cervical disc replacement have been optimistic and reported good clinical results and few complications. However, with longer follow-ups there has been an increasing incidence of heterotopic ossification as the most frequent late complication. Although the number of patients diagnosed with it is growing, heterotopic ossification influences the patient's clinical problems only little. What are its causes and how to prevent it are questions to be fully answered yet, Conclusions: Heterotopic ossification is the most frequent late complication of total disc replacement. Many factors may be responsible for its development and therefore its prevention is not clear. The correct indication and appropriate surgical technique are most often recommended, and are considered also by the authors to be most important. Restricted motion at the treated segment/s has no significant effect on the patient's clinical status.
- Published
- 2012
12. [Kyphotic deformities of the cervical spin].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Nesnídal P, Sebesta P, Vyskočil T, and Kryl J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cervical Vertebrae diagnostic imaging, Female, Humans, Kyphosis diagnostic imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Radiography, Young Adult, Cervical Vertebrae surgery, Kyphosis surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: The development of a cervical kyphotic deformity can be associated with a degenerative disease, trauma, tumour, developmental anomaly and also a surgical procedure. Post-operative kyphosis can develop after both the anterior and posterior surgical approaches. The deformity can also result from systemic diseases, such as ankylosing spondylitis or rheumatoid arthritis. The aim of the study was to make the clinical and radiographic evaluation of a group of patients with kyphotic deformity treated at our department., Material: Between May 2005 and April 2010, a total of 102 patients underwent correction of cervical kyphosis at our department. (Center for Spinal Surgery). Of them, 90 patients with complete medical records and post-operative periods longer than 6 months were included in this study. There were 36 men and 54 women ranging in age from 13 to 90 years and with an average of 56.7 years. In six patients cervical kyphosis was caused by an inveterate injury, in 71 by degenerative disease, in six it developed in association with rheumatoid arthritis, and in seven patients it was due to previous surgery. Patients with acute trauma, tumour, infectious disease or congenital anomaly were not included., Methods: All patients were examined before surgery by radiography in antero-posterior and lateral projection, including flexion- extension bending films, and by CT scanning of ultrathin cross-sections with sagittal, frontal and recently also 3D reconstructions. Magnetic resonance imaging in three planes was also performed. On the basis of the results and clinical examination, the operative strategy was planned. Surgery was carried out from the anterior or the posterior approach, or the combined approach was used. Three-stage surgery was performed in one patient. The surgical outcome was assessed using the Nurick score and Neck Disability Index (NDI), the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) was used to evaluate pain intensity or paraesthesia. Statistical analysis was done using the Chi-square test and paired t-test., Results: The average NDI value was 25.5 before surgery and 14.3 and 14.9 at one and two years after surgery, respectively. Compared with the pre-operative state, improvement or no changes were recorded in 89.7 % of the patients; transient deterioration occurred in 10.3 %. Improvements found were as follows: by one degree in 46.2 % of the patients, by two degrees in 18 %, by three degrees in 5.1 % and by five degrees in 2.6 % of the patients. The condition remained unchanged in 18 % of the patients. The average outcome was an improvement by one degree. The average pre-operative Nurick score was 0.7; an average post-operative value of 0.6 was recorded at both one and two years of follow-up. The average VAS value for neck and radicular pain was 5.7 pre-operatively, and 2.5 and 2.7 at one and two post-operative years, respectively. Out of 90 patients, complete bone union was achieved at 6 months after surgery in 88 patients (97.8 %). The average pre-operative value for the cervical curvature index (Ishihara) was -13.7; the average pre-operative cervical kyphosis was -14.4 degrees, ranging from -2.2 to -44.0 degrees. After surgery, the average Ishihara index was +15.3 and the average lordosis was +13.5 degrees, with a range of -16.0 to + 37.4 degrees., Discussion: A single/isolated anterior approach can be used for fixed deformities without ankylosing spondylitis. It allows for decompression of the anterior pathology and for correction of cervical kyphosis with use of instrumentation and structural graft. A combined ventral-dorsal approach is appropriate in fixed deformities or deformities involving the cervico-thoracic junction. The main principle of correction is to lengthen the cervical spinal column in the front and to shorten it at the back by anterior decompression with or without instrumentation and by subsequent posterior stabilisation. An isolated/single dorsal correction can be used in the case of successful correction by traction or specific head positioning on the table without anterior nerve compression. In severe fixed deformities such as Bekhterev's disease, the chin can be so close to the chest as to interfere with eating and breathing. The deformity most often develops at the cervico-thoracic junction and requires treatment by osteotomy., Conclusions: The results of the study showed a marked improvement in the patients' quality of life after kyphosis correction, improved neurological status and an improved posture seen on radiograms of the cervical spine. The study also revealed a higher number of potential complications associated, in particular, with corrective osteotomy. The best results were achieved with the combined surgical approach; however, the choice of a surgical method was independent of the patient's clinical status.
- Published
- 2011
13. [Pulmonary polymethylmetacrylate embolism: a rare complication of percutaneous vertebroplasty].
- Author
-
Nesnídal P, Stulík J, and Sebesta P
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Fractures, Compression therapy, Humans, Spinal Fractures therapy, Bone Cements, Lumbar Vertebrae injuries, Polymethyl Methacrylate, Pulmonary Embolism etiology, Vertebroplasty adverse effects
- Abstract
Percutaneous vertebroplasty is a minimally invasive surgical technique involving transpedicular injection of polymethylmetacrylate into the vertebral body. The aim of this procedure is to enhance the mechanical strength of a pathologically changed vertebra. Currently, the method is most often used for painful osteoporotic vertebral fractures, aggressive haemangiomas, necrotic lesions and spinal tumours, particularly the metastatic ones. Although this method is less invasive, relatively straight-forward and effective, there may be complications. The authors present the case of a 70-year-old woman who, on the second day after surgery, developed a rare symptomatic pulmonary polymethylmetacrylate embolism after per- cutaneous vertebroplasty performed for osteoporotic fractures of the lumbar spine.
- Published
- 2010
14. [Cauda equina syndrome after elective lumbar spine surgery].
- Author
-
Sebesta P, Stulík J, Vyskocil T, and Kryl J
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Lumbar Vertebrae surgery, Orthopedic Procedures adverse effects, Polyradiculopathy etiology
- Abstract
In this case study, three patients are presented who had incomplete cauda equina syndrome following elective lumbar spine surgery for degenerative disease. In all patients, the neurological symptoms developed due to post-operative arachnoiditis. Its aetiology, pathogenesis and diagnostics are discussed, as well as the methods of prevention and therapy which are still limited and often not beyond experimentation.
- Published
- 2009
15. [Occipitocervical fixation: long-term follow-up in fifty-seven patients].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Klézl Z, Sebesta P, Kryl J, and Vyskocil T
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Cervical Vertebrae surgery, Occipital Bone surgery, Spinal Fusion adverse effects
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: Occipitocervical fixation and spondylodesis is indicated in various cases of occipitocervical instability. The aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate the results of occipitocervical fixation at our institutions., Material: Between 1997 and 2007, a total of 57 patients underwent occipitocervical fixation (OC) there were 25 men and 32 women, from four to 77 years of age, with an average of 58.7 years. The patients were allocated to two groups according to the method of OC fixation used: tying wires or cables (group 1) screw-rod or screw-plate systems (group 2). Indications for OC fixation included trauma in 15, rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in 28, destruction due to psoriasis in one, tumour in eight, and congenital anomalies of the cervico-cranial junction in five patients. In five patients with tumour, OC fixation was completed with a transoral or transmandibular procedure. The C0-T 1 or C0-T 2 segments were fixed in 22 patients, C0-C2 segments in 14, C0-C3 segments in six, C0-C4 segments in two, C0-C5 segments in eight and C0-C6 segments in five patients., Methods: In atlanto-occipital dislocation, comminuted fractures of the ;atlas or similar injuries, C0-C1-C2 segments were fused in congenital anomaly, the C0-to-lower cervical spine was fixed, with C1 being avoided. The RA patients were treated by fixation of the C0 to T1 or T2 segments. The atlas was fixed by the screw method of Goel, the C2 joint by that of Judet, or stable fusion of the two vertebrae was carried out by the Magerl transarticular technique. For the middle and lower cervical spine, lateral mass screw fixation by the Magerl method was used, and from C7 caudally the vertebrae were fixed transpedicularly. Occasionally, in small children in particular, a Ransford frame fixed with wires or cables was used. In principle, an extent of fixation as small as possible was employed. The patients were evaluated at a final follow-up ranging between 12 and 132 months after the primary surgery (average, 42.7 months). Indications for surgery and the method and extent of instrumentation were recorded. The evaluation included pain and neurological deficit assessment, radiographic evidence of the stability of fixation and bone union and intra-operative and early and late post-operative complications., Results: Of the 57 patients, bone fusion was the objective of surgery in 52. Further five patients died of associated injuries or serious medical complications shortly after the operation. Of the remaining 47, bone union was achieved in 44 patients (93.6%). Pseudoarthrosis developed in three patients who, however, because of a higher age and minimal complaints did not require revision surgery. In terms of bone union, there was no difference between a short (C0-C2) and a long (C0-CX or C-T) fixation. No differences among fixation materials were found. The differences in percent bone union after spondylodesis between the tying-wire and screw-rod fixation systems were not statistically significant (p > 0.05). In the patients treated for RA, psoriasis or congenital anomaly, the Nurick scale score significantly improved at 2 years after surgery (p < 0.05). In comparison with the others, the RA patients had a significantly higher number of complications (p < 0.05). The patients treated for tumour showed a significant difference between the pre- and post-operative VAS values (p < 0.05)., Discussion: Of the patients with RA, psoriasis or congenital anomaly, 57.6% showed post-operative improvement in the Nurick scale score by 1-2 but never more than by 2. A decrease in pain intensity and neurological findings was recorded in 88.2% of the patients. This is in agreement with the results published in the international literature. In the patients treated for trauma, a high proportion (53.3%) had neurological deficit, which is unusually high for craniocervical injuries. This can be explained by the fact that OC fixation is used only in the most serious injuries. Of five patients with neurological deficit of Frankel grade A or B, three died and two required mechanical ventilation. Less serious neurological findings of Frankel grade C or D in three patients improved to a normal condition., Conclusions: Rigid OC fixation is a very effective method for the treatment of craniocervical junction instability. The currently used implants allow us to achieve high stability and efficiency of bone union. Regardless of the instrumentation used, fusion is achieved in more than 90%, and clinical improvement in more than 80% of the patients.
- Published
- 2009
16. [Hyperextension trauma in patients with cervical spondylosis].
- Author
-
Srámek J, Stulík J, Sebesta P, Vyskocil T, Kryl J, Nesnídal P, and Barna M
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cervical Vertebrae diagnostic imaging, Cervical Vertebrae surgery, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Radiography, Spondylosis diagnostic imaging, Spondylosis surgery, Cervical Vertebrae injuries, Spondylosis complications
- Abstract
PURPOSE OF THE STUDY To evaluate retrospectively a group of patients with hyperextension injury to the cervical spine who were treated at the Department of Spinal Surgery of the University Hospital in Motol, Prague, between 2003 and 2006. MATERIAL The group comprised 22 patients, 17 men (77 %) and five women (23 %) in the age range of 35 to 81 years, with an average of 59.5 years. All patients had, in association with the injury, neurological deficit of varying degree. METHODS All patients underwent X-ray and magnetic resonance imaging examination and received methylprednisolone according to the National Acute Spinal Cord Injury Study (NASCIS) 2 trial. Eleven patients had urgent surgery within 24 hours of injury; eight patients were operated on within an interval of 3 days to 2 months because of the seriousness of their state and multiple morbidity; and three patients were treated conservatively. Neurological deficit in terms of upper- and lower-limb mobility was evaluated by the American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) motor score. The values obtained for the urgently operated patients and for those operated on after a time interval were compared by Wilcoxons two-sample test. The other aspects evaluated included trauma aetiology, level of spinal cord injury, manner of treatment, and intra-operative and post-operative complications. RESULTS The most frequent cause of injury was a low-height fall (13 patients; 59 %); car accidents ranked second (9 patients; 41 %). In five patients (22.7 %) ebriety was found. Eighteen patients had no skeletal injury (81.8 %). Four patients (18.2 %). Four patients (18.2 %) suffered fractures of articular or spinous processes, but the anterior column skeleton was intact in all. The segment most frequently affected by myopathy was C3-C4, then C4-C5 and C5-C6. Decompression was carried out to the extent of myopathy; and in the adjacent segments only if significant stenosis was present. In both subgroups of surgically treated patients (urgent and delayed management), comparisons of the ASIA scores at the time of injury and at one-year follow-up showed no significat improvement in post-operative mobility, as evaluated by Wilcoxons two-sample test at a level of significance a = 5 %. No intra-operative or post-operative complications, except for early death, were recorded. In all patients the wound healed by first intention and no loosening of instrumentation was foud on follow-ups at the out-patient departments. DISCUSSION Although the greatest narrowing of the spinal canal due to spondylosis occurs at the C5-C6 segment, the C4-C5 segment sustained most injuries. Although some relevant papers report no significant difference in improved neurological deficit between patients treated surgically and those undergoing conservative therapy, we prefer surgical management, in most of the cases from the anterior approach, which allows us to remove dorsal osteophytes and perform careful decompression to prevent damage to nerve structures and to preserve those which are still intact. There was no significant difference in the outcome between urgent and delayed trauma management, which is unusual amongst other injuries associated with neurological lesions and this indicates that the timing of surgery must be strictly individual and should be carried out at a time when operative benefit outweighs operative burden. The surgical treatment used should, in the first place, lead to early recuperation and rehabilitation. CONCLUSIONS Hyperextension injuries of the cervical spine are usually associated with serious neurological deficit. A correct algorithm of examination will result in good treatment outcomes. However, these injuries require a therapy that is long-lasting and difficult, with a need for cooperation of anaesthesiologists, spinal surgeons, physical therapists and, last but not least, psychologists. Key words: cervical spine, hyperextension injury, spondylosis, myelopathy.
- Published
- 2009
17. [ProDisc-C mobile replacement of an intervertebral disc. A prospective mono-centric two-year study].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Kryl J, Sebesta P, Vyskocil T, Krbec M, and Trc T
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Intervertebral Disc Displacement surgery, Male, Middle Aged, Prostheses and Implants, Spinal Osteophytosis surgery, Cervical Vertebrae, Intervertebral Disc surgery, Prosthesis Implantation
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: To present the results of an independent mono-centric prospective study on patients with a mobile ProDisc-C implant. This cervical artificial disc replacement (CADR), which is one of the options for avoiding cervical spine fusion, was evaluated during two-years follow-up., Material: A total of 61 patients underwent CADR with a ProDisc-C in one or two segments at the Department of Spinal Surgery of the University Hospital in Motol, Prague, in the period from October 2004 to May 2006. Of these, 39 were included in the study and followed up for 2 years at least. Except for one patient, one segment was replaced in all patients., Methods: The surgical procedure recommended by the manufacturer (Synthes, USA) was used throughout the study. Clinical evaluation. Each patient was examined before and immediately after surgery, and followed up at 6 and 12 weeks, and 6, 12 and 24 months. At each follow-up the patient answered the questionnaire which included the Neck Disability Index (NDI) and Visual Analoque Scale (VAS) assessment for neck and radicular pain, analgesic use and the patient's satisfaction. Radiographic examination. Radiographs were taken in antero-posterior and lateral projection, and on bending films in flexion, extension and lateral flexion on both sides. The height of the intervertebral space of the involved segment and motion of the replaced and adjacent discs in flexion and extension were measured. The radiographs were examined for potential sinking, loosening, failure or migration of the implant. Statistical evaluation. The results were statistically analysed using Student's t-test., Results: Clinical outcome. The NDI evaluation showed that the mean value of the index improved from 44.9 pre-operatively to 26.1 and 25.9 at 1 and 2 years of follow-up, respectively, i.e. by 42.5 % in two years. The mean VAS score for neck pain changed from 5.8 pre-operatively to 3.0 and 2.7 at post-operative years 1 and 2, respectively, which is an improvement by 53.7 % in two years. The mean VAS score for radicular pain improved from 6.3 to 2.9 and 2.8 at the same intervals, which is an improvement by 53.9 % in two years. Radiographic findings. The mean height of the affected intervertebral space was 3.2 mm before and 7.4 mm after surgery and it did not change significantly thereafter. The mean range of motion at the involved segment was 4.1 degrees before and 11.1 degrees after surgery. Statistical evaluation. In assessment of both neck and radicular pain, the difference between the mean VAS score pre-operatively and that 6 weeks post-operatively was significant (t=4.4 and t=5.3, respectively; p<0.05). The difference in mean VAS scores between 6 weeks and 3 months post-operatively was not significant (t=1.69 and t=0.3, respectively; p>0.05). At the next follow-ups the mean VAS scores changed only minimally and the differences were not significant. The difference between the mean NDI before and that at 6 weeks after surgery was significant (t=11; p<0.05) and significant was also the difference between 6 weeks and 3 months after surgery (t=3.8; p<0.05). After that changes were minimal and were not significant., Discussion: Currently, mobile implants are in the focus of interest amongst spinal specialists, their materials and shapes, primary implant stability, the centre of rotation, indications for replacement and correct operative techniques being discussed. The situation appears similar to that of 20 years ago when large joint replacement was being introduced, and it is the future that will show the right development., Conclusions: This two-year prospective study on patients with CADR shows very good and promising outcomes. It is evident that the implant increases the range of motion at the treated segment and reduces degenerative changes in the adjacent intervertebral spaces. On the other hand, CADR is associated with complications such as artificial disc kyphosis and heterotropic ossifications. An unequivocal requirement for a correct indication and a faultless operative technique was the conclusion drawn from a detailed analysis.
- Published
- 2008
18. [Fractures of the dens in patients older than 65 years: direct osteosynthesis of the dens versus C1-C2 posterior fixation].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Sebesta P, Vyskocil T, and Kryl J
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Cervical Vertebrae surgery, Fracture Fixation, Internal methods, Odontoid Process injuries, Spinal Fractures surgery, Spinal Fusion
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: Surgical treatment is preferred in our department in all patients with type II and type III dens fractures, regardless of their age, with the exception of non-displaced or completely reduced fractures in young patients. The aim of this study was to evaluate patients over 65 years of age treated by direct osteosynthesis of the dens or posterior atlanto-axial fixation and spondylodesis., Material: In the years 2001 to 2005, 28 patients aged 65 years and older were surgically treated for dens fracture. This included 13 men and 15 women between 65 and 90 years of age, with an average of 77.4 years. According to the treatment, i.e., direct dens osteosynthesis (1) or C1-C2 posterior fixation (2), two groups were evaluated, and two categories were considered by age, i.e., 65 to 74 years (8 patients) and 75 years and older (20 patients). In 23 patients, an isolated fracture of the dens was present and, in five patients, injury was part of a complex C1-C2 fracture. A Frankel grade D neurological deficit was found in three patients., Methods: In all patients, surgical treatment by direct osteosynthesis of the dens from the anterior approach, using two cannulated screws, was preferred as the method of choice. However, in the case of distinct osteoporosis, fragmented fracture of the dens base or tear of the ligamentum transversum atlantis, we used the Harms method of posterior fusion with polyaxial screw fixation as the primary treatment, or the Magerl transarticular fixation completed with the Gallie technique from the dorsal approach. The patients were followed up at 3, 6 and 12 weeks, at 6 and 12 months, and then at one-year intervals. X-ray and clinical examinations were made at the regular follow-ups and functional radiographs were taken at 12 months following the surgery. The whole group was evaluated in the range of 18 to 84 months (average, 37.3 months). Neurological deficit was assessed on the basis of the Frankel classification. The results were analysed using the Chi-square test., Results: Of 20 patients still living at the time of this evaluation, 11 underwent direct osteosynthesis and nine were treated by posterior instrumented spondylodesis. In group 1, pseudoarthrosis of the dens or fibrous callus developed in one patient (9.1 %) and a line of fracture was evident in one patient of group 2 (11.1 %), which was not significant (p<0.05). However, a statistically significant difference in mortality was found when the two age categories were compared (p>0.05), with 0 % in the younger and 40 % in the older category. The overall mortality within 6 weeks of injury was 28.6 %. Mortality in group 1 and group 2 was 21.4 % and 35.7 %, respectively; this difference was not statistically significant (p<0.05)., Discussion: We use conservative treatment only in the patients who are able to stand up and move soon after injury. If this is not feasible, we prefer surgical treatment with the same aim achieved as soon as possible without rigid external fixation. In this study, surgery was associated with an acceptable number of minor complications due to poor bone quality or health state of the patient. The higher mortality in the higher age category was obviously related to generally poorer health of these patients., Conclusion: Surgical treatment can significantly improve the quality of life in elderly patients who have suffered a fracture of the dens. The surgical technique should be chosen to take bone quality, degenerative changes of the spine and overall health of the patient into consideration. Mortality after surgery is not related to the technique selected but to patient's age. Elderly patients with neurological deficit usually die due to co-morbidity, regardless of the therapy used.
- Published
- 2008
19. [Posterior stabilization of L5 burst fractures without reconstruction of the anterior column].
- Author
-
Sebesta P, Stulík J, Vyskocil T, and Kryl J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Lumbar Vertebrae diagnostic imaging, Lumbar Vertebrae surgery, Male, Middle Aged, Radiography, Spinal Fractures diagnostic imaging, Lumbar Vertebrae injuries, Spinal Fractures surgery, Spinal Fusion
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: To evaluate a group of 11 patients with L5 burst fractures treated by L4-S1 posterior instrumented spinal fusion without reconstruction of the anterior column., Material: The group included seven men and four women aged between 14 and 66 years (average, 37.5 years), followed for 12 to 36 months (average, 18 months). Ten patients were treated by posterior instrumented spinal fusion at the L4-S1 level, and one with an associated injury to L3 underwent L2-L4-S1 posterior instrumented spinal fusion. The spinal column was inspected in eight patients in whom neurological symptoms or significant stenosis were present., Methods: On admission, the evaluation of post-traumatic radiographs included measurements of the angle between the L4 lower and the S1 upper end-plates, the angle between the upper and lower end-plates of L5 and height of the anterior and posterior rims of the L5 vertebral body. CT scans were assessed for a relative narrowing of the spinal canal. The patient's neurological status was also evaluated. At 3, 6, 12, 24 and 36 months of follow-up, radiographs, neurological findings and subjective complaints were assessed., Results: On comparison of pre-operative values with those 3 months after surgery, the differences were on average 3.6 degrees for L4-S1 lordosis, 2.5 degrees for the angle between the upper and lower end-plates of L5, and 1 mm for the height of the anterior rim; there was no difference in posterior rim height. Eight patients had the same values at the latest as at 3- month follow-up. Three patients with broken screws showed the loss of L4-S1 lordosis by 4 to 13 degrees (average, 9 degrees). Neither the angle between the upper and lower end-plates of L5, nor vertebral body height were changed. The narrowing of the spinal canal by vertebral body fragments ranged from 0 to 60 % (average, 35 %) of canal space. On admission, neurological findings were normal in two patients and involved nerve root syndrome in five patients. In four patients it was not possible to assess their neurological status. At he latest follow-up, ten patients were free from peripheral neurological lesions, one still had lumbar radicular syndrome, two patients reported mild or moderate lumbosacral pain and seven patients were without complaints. Subjective complaints could not be assessed in two patients because of their mental state. An early post-operative complication included wound dehiscence in one patient (9 %) and, in three patients, broken screws in S1 were recorded as late complications., Discussion: Only a few references referring to a relatively low number of patients with L burst fractures treated by surgery were found in the literature. Most of the authors report limitations of reduction and good clinical outcomes. CONCLUSIONS The posterior instrumented spinal fusion of L5 alone is sufficient for the treatment of most L5 burst fractures. Early removal of the fixator is indicated in active patients. Often good clinical outcomes are in contradiction with radiological findings. The possibilities of spinal canal decompression by ligamentotaxis at this level of injury are limited. When significant spinal stenosis is present, laminectomy or hemilaminectomy is necessary to achieve decompression of the spinal canal.
- Published
- 2008
20. [Surgical treatment of spinal infections].
- Author
-
Klézl Z, Stulík J, Kryl J, Sebesta P, Vyskocil T, Bommireddy R, and Calthorpe D
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Bacterial Infections surgery, Spinal Diseases surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: Although great advances have been made in both radiological diagnosis and antibiotic therapy of microbial infections, the treatment of spinal infections remains a major clinical challenge. Many of the patients affected are referred to spinal units with long delays. The general population is ageing and the number of immunocompromised patients, as well as the number of operative procedures for spinal disorders are increasing. The aim of our study was to evaluate the clinical presentations of spinal infections, options for their diagnosis, indications for treatment and their risk factors and the results of surgery., Material and Methods: The group of 112 patients evaluated after the treatment of spinal infection comprised 63 men and 49 women at an average age of 59.4 years (range, 17 to 84). The average follow-up was 3.2 years (range, 6 months to 8 years). Of these, 82 patients had primary hematogenous infection, 29 had post-operative infection,and one had an infected gun shot wound. Thirty-six patients showed neurological deficit and six were paraplegic. The diagnostic methods included FBC, CRP and EST tests, examination of blood cultures, aspirates and biopsy samples from the infected site, bone scintigraphy, MRI and CT scanning. Indications for surgery included an infection not responding to conservative treatment,with existing or impending spinal instability, and with or without neurological deficit. The surgical management involved transpedicular drainage of the abscess, wound debridement from the posterior approach and instrumented spondylodesis. Surgery which included spinal decompression with radical excision of infected tissue was augmented with posterolateral instrumented fusion and/or anterior stabilization, as indicated., Results: Of the 112 patients treated, seven died of uncontrollable sepsis after surgery; the remaining 105 were followed up. Another four patients died of causes unrelated to the spinal problem treated within 12 months. All patients recovered except for two in whom the infection persisted, but 13 required more than one surgical procedure. One patient with CSF leakage failed to heal after five interventions. The most frequently isolated infectious agents were Staphylococus aureus, Staphylococus epidermidis and E. coli. Of the 33 patients with neurological deficit, 24 improved by one or two Frankel grades. The neurological status of six paraplegic patients did not improve, but their functional findings did after stabilization of the spine. Clinical evaluation showed 47 (44.7 %) very good, 40 (38 %) good, eight (7.6 %) unchanged and 10 (9.5 %) poor outcomes., Conclusion: Early diagnosis is a prerequisite for good treatment outcomes. Clinical examination, results of laboratory tests, and scintigraphy and MRI findings play the key role. When progressing osteolysis is suspected, a CT scan is necessary. Debridement should be as radical as possible, but always in compliance with the patient's health state. At an advanced stage of disease, spinal stabilization is important because it allows us to remove infected tissue. Intravenous and then oral antibiotic therapy at 2 to 4 and 6 to 12 weeks of follow-up is mandatory. The management of spinal infections is a complex process requiring good multidisciplinary cooperation.
- Published
- 2007
21. [Cervical spine injuries in patients over 65 years old].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Sebesta P, Vyskocil T, and Kryl J
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cervical Vertebrae surgery, Female, Humans, Male, Cervical Vertebrae injuries, Spinal Fractures surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: Cervical spine injuries in young adults are usually caused by high-energy trauma. However, a typical injury to the cervical spine can also occur in older patients, in whom it is often associated with the presence of osteoporosis and relatively low-energy trauma, similarly to distal radial or proximal femoral fractures, or fractures of the thoracolumbar spine. The aim of this study was to evaluate a group of elderly patients with cervical spine injuries treated at our department., Material: In the period from 2001 to 2005, 66 patients older than 65 years were treated for cervical spine injury at the Department of Spinal Surgery of the Motol University Hospital in Prague. Of these, the 53 patients treated surgically, and followed up longer than 6 months after surgery, were evaluated in detail in this retrospective study. They included 30 men and 23 women at an average age of 75.5 years (range, 65-92 years)., Methods: Conservative therapy was used to treat stable injuries to both the upper and the lower spine that were without risk of the development of secondary instability or deformity and that were not associated with neurological deficit. Surgery was performed in primary unstable injuries of the upper and lower spine or in injuries involving the risk of secondary instability or deformity, and also in all injuries associated with neurological deficit, when the patient's health state allowed for it. The final retrospective evaluation was made at 6 to 78 (average, 31.3) months after the primary operation. The evaluation included trauma etiology, type and level of injury, neurological findings, kind of treatment, complications and outcome., Results: In our group, 56 % of the patients were men, injury occurred due to a fall in 66 % and the upper cervical spine was affected in 60 % of the patients. Most of the upper cervical spine injuries happened to the patients over 75 years, and included fractures of the dens and complex atlantoaxial fractures. Neurological deficit was found in 37.7 % of the patients treated surgically, but only 7.5 % had a deficit classified as Frankel grade A or B. Of the 13 patients treated conservatively and the 53 patients treated surgically, two (15.4 %) and 15 (28.3 %) died, respectively., Discussion: The results of our study are in agreement with the relevant international literature data. Conservative treatment is used only in the patients in whom early mobilization, including standing and walking, is possible. In other patients, surgical treatment is preferred with the aim to achieve early mobilization without rigid external fixators, if possible. Surgery is carried out predominantly in patients with more serious injuries; therefore, mortality in our patients was nearly twice as high after surgery as after conservative treatment. Some surgical procedures were accompanied by minor complications usually associated with poor bone quality or poor health in general. Old patients with serious neurological deficit usually die of co-existent diseases regardless of the therapy used., Conclusions: In patients older than 65 years, injuries to the upper cervical spine are usually caused by low-energy trauma. In this age category, neurological deficit is found more often than in younger patients and is typically manifested as a central cord syndrome.
- Published
- 2007
22. [Our results of surgical management of unstable pelvic ring injuries].
- Author
-
Pavelka T, Dzupa V, Stulík J, Grill R, Báca V, and Skála-Rosenbaum J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Fracture Fixation methods, Fractures, Bone diagnostic imaging, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pelvic Bones diagnostic imaging, Radiography, Fractures, Bone surgery, Pelvic Bones injuries, Pelvic Bones surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: The authors present a group of patients treated for pelvic fractures in a period of 6 years and they evaluate radiographic findings and clinical outcomes following surgical management of type B and type C fractures., Material and Methods: Between July 1998 and June 2004, a total of 271 patients with pelvic fractures, 162 men and 109 women (average age, 42 years; range, 15 to 93 years) were hospitalized at the authors' departments. Of these, 141 patients were operated on (94 men, 47 women; average age, 37 years; range, 15 to 72 years) and 130 were treated conservatively (average age, 47 years; range, 15 to 93 years). The clinical outcome assessment in patients with type B and type C fractures treated surgically was based on the Majeed scoring system, and the radiographs were evaluated as described by Matta and Tornetta., Results: In 85 % of the patients, pelvic fractures were due to a high-energy trauma caused by traffic accidents in 63 % (pedestrian injury, 30 %; injury of the driver or passenger, 28 %; motorcycle injury, 5 %), by falls from heights in 20 % (occupational injury, 10 %; suicidal attempt, 10 %) and by other causes in 2 %. Sports accidents, usually due to a low-energy trauma, accounted for 8 % of the injuries (falls from a bicycle, violent kicks) and ordinary falls of elderly persons for 7 %. Type A injury was in 56 patients (21 %), type B in 103 patients (38 %) and type C in 112 patients (41 %). In 27 % of the patients, pelvic ring injury was part of a multiple trauma, in 58 % it was a combined injury and in 15 % it presented as a single trauma. Primary neurological deficit was found in nine patients (9 %) with type B fracture and in 20 patients (18 %) with type C fracture; this difference was statistically significant (p = 0.005). Urogenital injury was co-existent with type B fracture in 12 patients (12 %) and with type C fracture in 15 patients (13 %); the difference was not significant (p = 0.734). In seven patients (3 %), the injury involved an open fracture. Thirty-three patients (12 %) died during hospitalization. The difference in death rate between the patients with type C and those with type B fractures was significant (p = 0.021). Excellent and good clinical outcomes were achieved in 83 % and 70 % of the patients with type B and type C fractures, respectively. The difference was not significant (p = 0.236). Radiographs showed excellent reduction in 83 % of type B fractures and in 61 % of type C fractures; the difference was not significant (p = 0.271). Intra-operative complications were recorded in 22 %, early post-operative ones in 13 % and late complications in 11 % of the patients., Discussion: The significant difference in primary neurological deficit between the patients with type C fractures and those with type B fractures was attributed to more severe injury and vertical dislocation of the posterior segment in type C fractures. On the other hand, the fact that urogenital involvement was not significantly higher in type C fractures can be explained by an equal presence of anterior segment injury in both type B and type C fractures. The significantly higher number of deaths in patients with type C fractures, as compared with those with type B fractures, was related more to severe injuries of other organ systems in polytraumatized patients than to injuries of the pelvis itself, although severe injury to the posterior segment in type C fractures can result in massive bleeding into the retroperitoneum., Conclusions: An active approach to the treatment of patients with unstable pelvic fractures, which is based on the correct diagnosis, comprehensive multi-disciplinary care, urgent primary stabilization and early definitive fixation by internal osteosynthesis, offers a prospect of survival and a good functional outcome for the patient. However, a high proportion of lasting sequelae due to altered biomechanics of the pelvic ring, and irreversible injuries to neural structures and the urogenital system may lessen good results achieved by a demanding surgical procedure on the skeleton.
- Published
- 2007
23. [Spinal injuries in children and adolescents].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Pesl T, Kryl J, Vyskocil T, Sebesta P, and Havránek P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Spinal Injuries diagnosis, Spinal Injuries surgery, Spinal Injuries therapy
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: Spinal injuries in children are rare and account for a low proportion of all childhood injuries. Due to anatomical and biomechanical properties of the growing spine, there are great differences between spinal injury in childhood and adulthood. Because of higher mobility and elasticity of the spine and a lower body mass in children, spinal injuries are not frequent and represent only 2 to 5 % of all spinal injuries. In this retrospective study, the effectiveness of conservative and surgical treatment of injured spines in children is evaluated in a 10-year period., Material: All patients from birth to the completed 18th year of age treated in our departments between 1996 and 2005 were included in this study. The patients, evaluated in three age categories (0-9, 10-14, 15-18), were allocated to two groups according to the method of treatment used (conservative or surgical). The information on patients treated conservatively was drawn from medical records; the surgically treated patients were invited for a check-up., Methods: We used conservative treatment in patients with stable spinal injury who had no neurological deficit and in patients with neurological deficit but without apparent injury to the skeleton. Surgery was indicated in patients with unstable spinal injury and in those with neurological deficit and apparent injury to the skeletal structures. Injuries to the cervical spine were treated conservatively using a Philadelphia collar or a halo-vest in more serious cases. For treatment of injury to the thoracolumbar spine, the Magnuson method was preferred, together with rest in bed until subsidence of acute pain, followed by application of a vest and active rehabilitation to strengthen postural muscles. When surgery was used, the procedure was selected on a strictly individual basis in patients under 12; in older patients it was carried out according to the adult treatment protocol., Results: During 1996 through 2005, we treated a total of 15 646 patients with injury to the skeleton, aged 0 to 18 years. The spine was affected in 571 cases, which is 3.6 %. We used conservative treatment in 528 (92.5 %) and surgery in 43 (7.5 %) children. The period between surgery and evaluation ranged from 6 to 120 months (average, 46.3 months) in the patients treated conservatively, and from 6 to 66 months (average, 27 months) in the surgically treated patients. The group of patients treated conservatively consisted of 292 boys (55. 3 %) and 236 girls (44.7 %); of these 219 (41.5 %) were in the 0-9 year category, 251 (47.5 %) were between 10 and 14 years and 58 (11 %) were 15 to 18 years old. The average age in this group was 10.2 years. The most frequent cause of injury was a fall (277; 52.2 %), then sports activity or games (86; 16.3 %), car accidents (34; 6.4 %) and diving accidents (30; 5.7 %). Pedestrians were injured on 25 occasions (4.7 %) and other causes of injury were recorded in 76 patients (14.4 %). In all age categories, injury to the thoracic spine was most frequent (340; 64.4 %). Three and more vertebrae were injured (multi-segment injury) in 124 patients (23.5 %). The thoracolumbar spine was affected in 22 patients (4.2 %), and lumbar vertebrae were injured in 28 patients (5.3 %). Injury to the cervical spine, both upper and lower, was least frequent, including four (0.8 %) and 10 (1.9 %) patients, respectively. None of the patients in this group showed neurological deficit. The surgically treated group included 29 (67.4 %) boys and 14 (32.6 %) girls; two (4.7 %) children were between 0 and 9 years, nine (20.9 %) between 10 and 14 years, and 32 (74.7 %) between 15 and 18 years, with an average of 15.1 years for the whole group. The frequent causes of injury were car accidents and falls in 21 (48.8 %) and 14 (32.6 %) children, respectively. Other causes were infrequent. The upper cervical spine was operated on in five (11.6 %), lower cervical spine in eight (18.6 %), thoracic spine in 13 (30.2 %), thoracolumbar spine in five (11.6 %) and lumbar vertebrae in 12 (27.9 %) patients. Thirty-six (83.7 %) patients had fractures, five had dislocated fractures (11.6 %) and two (4.7 %) had a dislocation. Of the 43 children in this group, neurological deficit was recorded in nine (20.9 %); this included a complete spinal cord lesion, an incomplete spinal cord lesion and a nerve root lesion in three, five and one patient, respectively., Discussion: The results of this study confirm, in the majority of aspects, the conclusions of previously published papers. In some of the characteristics described above, however, our results are different, which can be explained by some specific features of care for injured children in the Czech Republic., Conclusions: Childhood spinal injuries account for only 2 to 5 % of all spinal injuries and for 3.6 % of all skeletal injuries in children. Particularly at the age of 11 to 12 years, they differ significantly from spinal injuries in adults and therefore require different therapeutic approaches. The cervical spine is affected most often in younger children, while the thoracolumbar spine in older children. Multi-segment injuries are typical in the childhood spine, particularly in smaller children. Typically, children show SCIWORA and a more rapid improvement of neurological deficit than adults. Conservative treatment is preferred; surgery before 12 years of age is strictly individual, while after 12 years therapy is similar to that used in adults.
- Published
- 2006
24. [Spinal injury caused by a nail fired from a stud gun].
- Author
-
Kryl J, Stulík J, Vyskocil T, and Sebesta P
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Foreign Bodies surgery, Spinal Injuries surgery, Wounds, Penetrating surgery
- Abstract
The patient, a 52-year-old male foreign citizen working as a construction worker, was attacked by his coworker who had fired a drive stud, 70 mm long, with reverse hooks from a powered gun at him; the stud pierced the worker's spine at the scapular level. The patient was taken to the nearest surgical ward. On the basis of clinical presentation and X-ray of the thoracic spine, the diagnosis of penetrating injury to the spinal column at the 7th thoracic vertebra level was made. Subsequently, the patient was admitted to the intensive care unit of our department. On admission the patients showed slight paresis of the right lower extremity and hypesthesia of the right thigh, but no other neurological deficit. After preoperative examination, the patient was operated on within six hours of the injury. Intraoperatively, a 3-mm-thick stud, piercing the T7 vertebral arch, was found on the left side, lateral to the T7 spinous process. After partial resection of the arch around the stud, the spinal canal was inspected. The stud passed paramedially on the right side through the dura mater and the centre of the spinal cord into the body of the 7th thoracic vertebra. The stud was gently removed. Subsequently, some sanguineous liquor appeared. The dura mater was sutured and the wound was closed layer by layer. The postoperative period was uneventful, and the patient was allowed to stand up on day 2. The drain was removed on day 4. Healing by first intention took place. At 6 weeks after surgery slight neurological deficit still remained. Key words: spinal penetrating injury, spinal gunshot injury.
- Published
- 2006
25. [Injury to major blood vessels in anterior thoracic and lumbar spinal surgery].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Vyskocil T, Bodlák P, Sebesta P, Kryl J, Vojácek J, and Pafko P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Orthopedic Procedures methods, Thoracic Vertebrae surgery, Blood Vessels injuries, Intraoperative Complications, Lumbar Vertebrae surgery, Orthopedic Procedures adverse effects
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: The anterior approach to the thoracic and lumbar spine is used with increasing frequency for various indications. With the advent of prosthetic intervertebral disc replacement, its use has become even more frequent and has often been associated with serious complications. The aim of this study was to evaluate vascular complications in patients who underwent anterior spinal surgery of the thoracic and lumbar spine., Material: We performed a total of 531 operations of the thoracolumbar spine from the anterior approach. In 12 cases, after exposure of the body of the first or second thoracic vertebrae, we employed the Smith-Robinson technique to expose the cervical spine. We used sternotomy in six, posterolateral thoracotomy in 209, the pararectal retroperitoneal approach in 239, anterolateral lumbotomy in 58 and the transperitoneal approach in seven patients. The aim of surgery was somatectomy in 190 patients and discectomy in 341 patients. Sternotomy and transperitoneal approaches were carried out by a thoracic or vascular surgeon and all the other procedures were done by the first author. The indications for spinal surgery included an accident in 171, tumor in 56, spondylodiscitis in 43 and a degenerative disease in 261 patients., Methods: All patients indicated for anterior spinal surgery were examined by conventional radiography in two projections, and this was completed by CT sagittal and frontal reconstructions of the affected region. Most patients also underwent MR imaging. The Smith-Robinson approach was used for exposure of T1 or T2. Sternotomy was indicated for treatment of T2-T4 and also T1 in the patients with a short, thick neck. Access to T3-L1 was gained by posterolateral thoracotomy, in most cases performed as a minimally invasive transpleural procedure. For access to the lumbar spine we usually used the retropleural approach from a pararectal incision or lumbotomy. We preferred the pararectal retroperitoneal approach in L2-S1 degenerative disease, L5 fractures, and L5-S1 spondylodiscitis. We carried out lumbotomy in patients with trauma, tumors and L1-L4 spondylodiscitis. The transperitoneal approach from lower middle laparotomy was used only in tumors at L5 or L4. For treatment of trauma and degenerative disease of the lumbar spine we preferred less invasive procedures, and for tumors and spondylodiscitis we used more extensive exposure because of the difficult terrain. The patients were followed up for 2 to 96 months (average, 31.4 months) after anterior spinal surgery., Results: In 12 patients treated by the Smith-Robinson procedure and in six patients undergoing sternotomy, neither early nor late signs of any injury to major blood vessels or internal organs were recorded. The 209 patients with posterolateral thoracotomy were also free from any signs of vascular injury, but trauma to the thoracic duct was recorded in one case. We found injury to major blood vessels in three patients in the group treated by the pararectal retroperitoneal procedure. In the total of 531 anterior spinal surgery procedures this accounts for 0.56 %; of the 304 lumbar operations and 239 pararectal retroperitoneal operations it is 0.99 % and 1.26 %, respectively. In one patient the vascular injury was associated with trauma to the ureter., Discussion: In our group of 531 patients we found a higher risk of vascular injury when the L4-L5 segment was treated, when less invasive surgery was used or when spinal anatomy was altered due to tumor or spondylodiscitis. All the complications were recorded in the first 250 patients. It should be emphasized that, because in five patients, the planned anterior spondylodesis would have been associated with high risk due to altered anatomy of the bifurcation of the aorta, these patients were treated by dorsal instrumented spondylodesis. We also avoided the anterior approach for revision spinal surgery and used the posterior approach instead. Vascular complications were treated in cooperation with a vascular or cardiac surgeon. In the most serious case, if a sophisticated cardiosurgical technique had not been immediately available, the patient would probably have died., Conclusions: The technique of anterior approach is safe only in the hands of experienced spinal surgeons with long experience. In institutions where anterior spinal surgery is not a routine method it is advisable to involve a vascular or cardiac surgeon. However, the most important point is to know when not to operate.
- Published
- 2006
26. [Harms technique of C1-C2 fixation with polyaxial screws and rods].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Vyskocil T, Sebesta P, and Kryl J
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Bone Screws, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Spinal Fusion instrumentation, Atlanto-Axial Joint surgery, Spinal Fusion methods
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: The Harms technique of stabilizing C1-C2 by fixation with polyaxial screws and rods is a further option for atlantoaxial fixation from the dorsal approach. Harms and Melcher published this method in 2001, but the operation had first been performed by Harms in August 1997. The aim of this study is to evaluate the first results and try to assign the Harms C1-C2 fixation an appropriate standing in the in broad range of options for stabilization of the atlantoaxial complex., Material: Between December 2002 and January 2004 we carried out the Harms fixation of C1-C2 on 22 patients admitted to the Department of Spine Surgery, Motol University Hospital, 2nd Medical Faculty in Prague. Out of these, 18 patients were included in this study, 10 men and 8 women between 23 and 84 years of age (average, 55.4 years) followed-up longer than 6 months. In 14 patients we used the Harms technique as a permanent fixation of C1-C2 in order to achieve atlantoaxial arthrodesis and, in four patients, we applied it only for a period of 4 to 6 months without the use of bone grafts or their substitutions. We employed the permanent fixation to treat the following conditions: fracture of the atlas in three patients, type IIA comminuted fracture of the dens base in three patients, fracture of C2 categorized as "other" in two patients, atlantoaxial vertical instability in one patient with rheumatoid arthritis, malunion of the fractured dens in one patient, and complicated trauma to C1-C2 in four patients. The temporary fixation was used for type III displaced fractures of the dens in two and fixed atlantoaxial rotatory dislocations also in two cases. Only one patient showed signs of Frankel C neurological deficit on admission, the rest were without neurological findings., Methods: All screws were inserted under an image intensifier always in lateral projection. First we retracted the greater occipital nerve in a caudal direction towards C2 with a fine raspatory and, using an awl, marked the entry point in the C1 lateral mass; a pilot hole, reaching through the anterior cortical bone, was made with a 2.5 mm drill. It followed a straight or slightly convergent trajectory in an anterior-posterior direction and parallel to the plane of the C1 posterior arch in the sagittal direction. Individual anatomical variations in the atlantoaxial complex of every patient were respected. The hole was tapped through the entire vertebral body, with the exception of osteoporous bone in which only the posterior cortical bone was treated with a screw tap. At this stage profuse bleeding usually arose from dissection around the epidural venous plexus along the C1-C2 joint. This was effectively controlled by a quick insertion of a screw and compression of the venous plexus with the screw head. To control bleeding by bipolar electrocautery is difficult and is always associated with a risk of nerve injury. Screws 3.5 mm thick, with polyaxial heads, were inserted bicortically into the lateral mass of C1. Subsequently, the intervertebral C2-C3 joint was localized and its medial border in the spinal canal was palpated. The entry point for placement of a C2 pedicle screw was marked with an awl at the point of intersection at a distance of 2 mm from the medial border and 5 mm from the caudal border of the C2 articular process. Under an X-ray intensifier in lateral projection, a hole was drilled approximately parallel to the screws inserted in C1, i. e., at an angle of 20 to 30 degrees cranially, up to and through the anterior cortical bone. In the transversal plane, the screws were situated in a convergent direction at an angle of 20 to 25 degrees. After all screws had been inserted, we reduced the antlantoaxial complex in the correct anatomical position by manipulating the patient's head or by directly adjusting the screws. Connecting 3.0-mm rods were then applied and fastened by cap nuts or inner nuts according to the instrumentation used., Results: Operative time ranged from 35 to 155 min, with an average of 81 min. Intra-operative blood loss ranged from 50 to 1500 ml, with an average of 560 ml. The X-ray intensifier was used for a period of 0.4 to 2.6 min, with an average of 0.9 min. A total of 36 screws were inserted in the atlas; their length ranged from 16 to 34 mm (average, 30.6 mm). All screws were positioned correctly in the C1 lateral mass; two screws did not reach up to the anterior cortical bone and one protruded over it, but without causing clinical problems. Thirty-six screws were inserted in the axis. Their length ranged from 28 to 36 mm (average, 31.7) mm). Twenty-seven screws were correctly applied through the isthmus into the C2 anterior cortical bone, three were too short to reach it and five were placed too close to the vertebral artery canal. Of these, two protruded into the artery canal, but without clinical consequences. One screw inserted too medially passed into the spinal canal, but this also was without clinical response. Of the 36 screws inserted in C2, three (8.3 %) were malpositioned. Bony fusion at C1-C2 was the goal of this operation in 14 patients. At 6 weeks post-operatively, it was achieved in two patients, at 12 weeks in 12 patients and at 6 months in all 14 patients. The C1-C2 segment was stable at 12 weeks in all 18 treated patients. Four patients reported restriction of motion in rotation by 10 to 25 % after removal of the instrumentation., Discussion: Operative time, longer at the beginning than with the Magerl technique, gradually shortened to between 45 and 60 min. Similar trends were seen when intra-operative blood loss and X-ray exposure were evaluated. Using the Harms and Melcher procedure we saved the greater suboccipital nerve. In contrast to these authors, however, we did not resect the atlantoaxial joint. Solid fusion was achieved in all our patients. Of the total of 72 screws inserted, only three (4.2 %) were assessed as malpositioned; however, when related to the 36 screws inserted in C2, this was 8.3 %, which indicates that insertion of screws in C2 was more difficult. We did not observe any clinical consequences in any of these cases., Conclusions: The Harms fixation of C1-C2 is a very effective technique for stabilizing the atlantoaxial complex. It enables us to provide temporary fixation without damage to atlantoaxial joints and to reduce the vertebrae after the screws and rods had been inserted, which is unique. These advantages compensate for a higher cost of the implant.
- Published
- 2005
27. [Surgical treatment for disorders of the cervicothoracic junction region].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Vyskocil T, Sebesta P, Kryl J, and Pafko P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Cervical Vertebrae injuries, Child, Discitis surgery, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Spinal Fractures surgery, Spinal Neoplasms surgery, Thoracic Vertebrae injuries, Cervical Vertebrae surgery, Orthopedic Fixation Devices, Orthopedic Procedures, Spinal Diseases surgery, Thoracic Vertebrae surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: The complex anatomy of the cervicothoracic junction region makes a reliable assessment of plain radiographs in lateral projection difficult or even impossible, which may result in failure to detect fracture or other pathology in this region of the spine. The aim of this study was to evaluate the patients with spinal disorders in the region of the seventh cervical to the third thoracic vertebrae treated at our department., Material: During the period from November 2001 to June 2004, 34 patients with disorders of the C7-T3 region were treated surgically at the Department of Spinal Surgery, Motol Teaching Hospital, which accounted for 2.1% of the 1537 patients treated for spinal diseases in this period. Instability of the cervicothoracic junction was caused by tumors in 15 and by injury in 14 patients. Other diagnoses included deformity associated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in two patients, spondylodiscitis in one, and hemivertebral deformity at C7 and T1, each in one patient. The group included 16 women and 18 men between 8 and 75 years, with the mean of 52.3 years (after excluding the two children with hemivertebral deformity aged 8 and 9 years, respectively). The trauma subgroup had a significantly lower mean age (43.6 years) than the tumor subgroup (59.9 years)., Methods: We placed the patients in three groups according to the etiology of cervicothoracic junction disorder, namely, 1. tumors and spondylodiscitis; 2. injuries; 3. others. Group 1 included 16 patients, 15 with tumors and one with spondylodiscitis. Two patients were treated by dorsal stabilization, one by ventral stabilization and the rest underwent combined surgery. Of 14 patients in group 2, three were treated from the posterior approach, six from the anterior approach and five by the combined approach. All group 3 patients underwent surgery from the posterior approach, with two patients being treated without instrumentation., Results: Of the 34 patients, only 33 were included; one was lost to follow-up soon after the operation. In group 1, no excellent, five very good, five satisfactory and two unsatisfactory outcomes were recorded. No intraoperative complications such as injury to the major vessels or nerve structures occurred; in one patient, profuse bleeding from arteries supplying a metastatic tumor had to be arrested. Late complications included loosening of the dorsal instrumentation in two patients, who required repeat operations. In group 2, there were six excellent, four good, two satisfactory and one poor outcomes. Late complications in one patient included loosening of the ventral instrumentation, followed by repeat surgery. Group 3 showed two excellent and two satisfactory outcomes; the latter were in the RA patients. Late complications involved one loosening of the dorsal instrumentation requiring repeat surgery. No injury to the major vessels or nerve structures was recorded in either group 2 or group 3. No deep infection was recorded in any of the three groups., Discussion: The results of our evaluation are in agreement with those of other authors and, similarly to them, we had to deal with the difficult issues of diagnosis. Currently, we prefer, in addition to conventional X-ray examination, CT scans including sagittal and frontal reconstruction, recently completed with magnetic resonance imaging, in all patients with cervicothoracic junction disorders. This policy allows us to avoid delays in making correct diagnosis and to provide conditions for effective treatment. In stabilization from the posterior approach we use rod-screw fixation that, in the majority of cases, is not combined with thoracic fixation. Previously, we have inserted screws in the articular processes at the C7 level, but now we prefer transpedicular fixation. Complicated anterior surgical procedures, such as complete or partial sternotomy, are always performed with the assistance of a thoracic surgeon. A noticeably high number of patients with neurological deficit was seen also in our group. Postoperative care is always provided in cooperation with the spinal unit of our hospital. Intensive inter-disciplinary cooperation has an important role in that our patients have a minimum of complications in comparison with the literature data., Conclusions: Injuries and diseases of the spine at the cervicothoracic junction present a complex issue with a high potential for mistakes and complications. The principle of success lies in a high-quality X-ray examination, CT scans with sagittal and frontal reconstruction, and magnetic resonance imaging of the region affected. The complex anatomy of that region requires demanding surgical procedures, which can be performed only by a highly qualified and specialized team with appropriate facilities.
- Published
- 2005
28. [Combined atlantoaxial fractures].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Vyskocil T, Sebesta P, and Kryl J
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, External Fixators, Female, Fracture Fixation, Internal, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Radiography, Spinal Fractures diagnostic imaging, Spinal Fractures therapy, Cervical Atlas injuries, Odontoid Process injuries, Spinal Fractures surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: Combined fractures of the atlas and epistropheus account for 3 % of all acute injuries to the cervical spine. In relation to all C1 and C2 injuries this is 43 % and 16 %, respectively. The aim of this study is to evaluate a group of patients with combined C1-C2 fractures and to suggest an effective therapeutic procedure., Material: In the years 1996 to 2003, a total of 16 patients with trauma to the atlantoaxial complex were treated at the Orthopedic Department of the Third Faculty of Medicine, Charles University, Prague (1996-2001) and the Department of Spinal Surgery of the University Hospital in Motol, Prague (2001-2003). These injuries included a combined fracture of the dens (Anderson and D'Alonzo type II) and of the atlas posterior arch in six patients, a type II dens fracture combined with Jefferson fracture in two patients, a type III fracture of the dens with a lateral mass fracture in two patients, hangman's fracture with posterior arch fracture in three patients, a type II fracture of the dens with anterior arch fracture in one patient, a fracture of the C2 body with Jefferson fracture in one patient and a fracture of the C2 body with fracture of the lateral mass in one patient. Two patients were treated conservatively and 14 underwent surgery. On admission neurological deficit was found in five patients., Methods: Fourteen patients were operated on. Direct osteosynthesis of the dens, with motion in the atlantoaxial complex preserved, was performed in five patients. Seven patients underwent C1-C2 fixation that, in one, involved the C1-C3 segments; five patients were treated by Harms fixation with polyaxial screws from the posterior approach, two by the Magerl or Gallie techniques and one patient required occipito-cervical fixation of C0-C2. The patient with a hangman's fracture combined with fracture of the atlas posterior arch was treated by discectomy of C2-C3, tricortical graft from the iliac crest and plate application. The patients used Philadelphia collars for 6 to 12 weeks according to the type of injury and their bone quality., Results: Three patients (two undergoing direct osteosynthesis of the dens and one with occipito-cervical fixation) reported intermittent upper neck pain that required taking analgesics. The patient treated by occipito-cervical fixation repeatedly complained of restriction of rotational head movement by about 50 %. Radiograms of the cervical spine in both flexion and extension taken at 12- to 14-week follow-up all showed stable C0-C1 and C1-C2 segments. In the five patients undergoing direct osteosynthesis of the dens, complete bony union was found on X-ray and CT examination by 6 to 24 weeks postoperatively. Similarly, full instrumented fusion was achieved by 12 to 24 weeks postoperatively in the seven patients treated by dorsal fixation. The patient with anterior C2-C3 fixation showed, on X-ray images, a completely remodeled segment at 24 weeks after surgery. There was one intraoperative complication involving management of profuse bleeding from the venous plexus along the greater occipital nerve. No other complications related to the surgical procedure were recorded and no injury to the spinal cord, nerve roots or the vertebral artery was observed. None of the patients experienced any deterioration of neurological findings during the early postoperative period. One patient had to undergo resuturing of the operative wound from the posterior approach, because of subcutaneous necrosis that had failed to heal. No instrumentation failure or infection, regarded as late complications, were recorded., Discussion: At our Department we prefer early operative treatment involving spondylodesis in the shortest segment possible, with special emphasis on preserving rotational C1-C2 movement. Therefore, in some cases, we use only temporary stabilization with removal of instrumentation after 3 to 4 months. In this group the most frequent fractures were those combined with type II fractures of the dens. In such cases we always prefer direct osteosynthesis of the dens or, if this is not possible, the Harms technique of C1-C2 fixation, possibly only temporary. We believe, in agreement with Guilot and Fesser, that a potential failure of conservative therapy may result in a longer convalescent period and that patients should always be informed about these issues. In contrast to Guilot and Fesser we treat combined hangman's fractures from the anterior approach, by discectomy, tricortical graft and plate application., Conclusions: Combined atlantoaxial fractures are serious, life-threatening injuries which, because of their diversity, require an individual approach to each patient. Early surgery is recommended with increasing frequency, particularly in the cases with persisting dislocation or instability. At the same time it is necessary to ensure that motion restriction of the cervical spine be minimal.
- Published
- 2005
29. [Purulent arthritis of the spinal facet joint].
- Author
-
Sebesta P, Stulík J, Kryl J, and Vyskocil T
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Epidural Abscess diagnosis, Epidural Abscess therapy, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Suppuration, Arthritis, Infectious diagnosis, Arthritis, Infectious therapy, Spondylarthritis diagnosis, Spondylarthritis therapy, Zygapophyseal Joint
- Abstract
Purulent arthritis of the facet joint is a rare affection. It occurs most commonly by hematogenous spread of microorganisms and the initiating agent is in most cases Staphylococcus aureus. Diagnosis is made predominantly by means of MRI and hemocultures, or culture of pus aspirated from the abscess with a needle. Conservative therapy consists in a long-term administration of antibiotics. In case of insufficient response to the treatment or development of a neurological deficit, the patient is indicated for surgical revision, drainage and, if necessary, for decompression of nerve structures. In addition to sepsis, a severe complication of the purulent arthritis of the facet joint is propagation of the abscess epidurally, intradurally or foraminally with the risk of the onset of neurological deficit. In their case series the authors present four cases of purulent arthritis of the facet joint diagnosed and treated at the Department of Spinal Surgery of the University Hospital in Motol, Prague.
- Published
- 2005
30. [Unilateral dislocations of the thoracic and lumbar spine].
- Author
-
Sebesta P, Stulík J, Vyskocil T, and Kryl J
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Joint Dislocations diagnosis, Lumbar Vertebrae diagnostic imaging, Male, Radiography, Spinal Fusion, Spinal Injuries diagnostic imaging, Thoracic Vertebrae diagnostic imaging, Joint Dislocations surgery, Lumbar Vertebrae injuries, Spinal Injuries surgery, Thoracic Vertebrae injuries
- Abstract
Unilateral dislocation is a trauma typical of the cervical spine. Case reports on unilateral dislocation of the thoracic or lumbar vertebrae can be found in the relevant literature only rarely and they often describe this condition associated with multiple trauma or combined injuries. Although unilateral dislocation is an unstable injury with rotation involved, injury to the spinal cord or spinal nerve roots is not common. Diagnosis is based on radiographic and CT examination. Therapy includes open reduction and instrumented spondylodesis of the injured segment. The cases of two patients with unilateral dislocations in the thoracic and the lumbar spine, respectively, treated at the Department of Spinal Surgery, Motol Teaching Hospital in Prague, are reported here.
- Published
- 2005
31. [Transarticular fixation of C1-C2: a multicenter retrospective study].
- Author
-
Suchomel P, Stulík J, Klézl Z, Chrobok J, Lukás R, Krbec M, and Magerl F
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Joint Instability surgery, Male, Middle Aged, Postoperative Complications, Retrospective Studies, Atlanto-Axial Joint surgery, Spinal Fusion methods
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: Transarticular C1-2 fixation is a surgical alternative in treatment of atlantoaxial instability. Although the method provides very good immediate and long-term stability, it still involves several disadvantages. The group of patients as reported from various institutions are usually very small and hardly comparable. In order to objectively compare the results of the method, we collected the groups of patients treated in four institutions dealing with surgery of the cervical spine in Czech Republic., Material and Methods: During the 9-years period (1993-2001), the transarticular C1/2 fixation was performed in 80 patients (mean age 45.6 years, range 4-85 years). The procedure was indicated for atlantoaxial instability due to rheumatoid arthritis in 32 cases, pseudoarthrosis of the odontoid process in 15 cases, fracture of the odontoid in 8 cases, complex C1-C2 fracture in 7 cases, tumour in 5 cases, C1 fracture in 4 cases, os odontoideum in 3 cases, purulent osteolysis of the odontoid in 3 cases and instability due to tuberculosis in one case, respectively. Two patients underwent surgery for painful arthrosis of atlantoaxial joints only. Transarticular fusion was combined with posterior interlaminar fixation using autologous graft and wire in most of the cases. Clinical and radiological results were evaluated in the early postoperative period and 3, 6 and 12 months after surgery, respectively. The position of the screws in relation to lateral mass of the atlas was evaluated according to our own criteria as optimal, suboptimal, and misplaced. Long-term postoperative stability and bone fusion were also followed. The follow-up ranged from 3 to 99 months (mean 29.1 months). There were 72 patients available for long-term follow-up (i.e. more then 6 months)., Results: We inserted 150 screws; two screws were used in 72 patients, one screw in 6 patients while in two patients, the surgery had to be aborted without screwing. Optimal placement was achieved in 103 cases (68.7%), suboptimal because of too medial or lateral placement of the screws in 26 cases (17.3%), suboptimal due to a short screw in 9 case (6%) and a long screw in 8 cases (5.3%). Four screws (2.7%) were found misplaced (i.e. out of the lateral masses). Fusion was confirmed in 51 cases out of 72 operated on (70.8%) at 6-months follow-up, and in 55 cases out of 63 available for follow-up (87.3%) at 12 months, respectively. Segmental stability was achieved in all patients, even in cases with incomplete fusion as seen on radiograph. Furthermore, six screws in four patients were discovered to be broken, nevertheless without any clinical consequences. There were 4 cases of peroperative injury to th vertebral artery (i.e. 5% of patients, 2.7% of screws), one case of dural tear and one case of excessive blood loss from epidural venous plexus. These complications, however, did not cause any significant clinical consequences, either. Other postoperative complications included wound dehiscence in 3 cases, 2 cases of hardware failure due to wrong indication for surgery and 2 cases of persistent neck pain., Discussion: Transarticular C1/2 fixation is known to be universal and stable technique suitable for the treatment of atlantoaxial instability. According to biomechanical studies, this method provides the best stability mainly in rotation and lateral flexion (inclination) when compared to other described methods of atlantoaxial fixation. The fusion rate is reported to vary between 90 to 100% if the posterior interlaminar fusion using bone graft and wire is simultaneously performed. The rare incidence of pseudarthrosis is usually considered to be related to a poor surgical technique as even only one screw should provide bone fusion if properly placed. Using strict evaluation criteria, the fusion rate in our sample of patients was 87.3% at 12 months, or, 92.1% if also controversial radiographs were included. The injury to the vertebral artery is the most serious complication of the method; its incidence in our group (5% of patients) is comparable to data from literature. We believe that most of these events happened because of individual anatomical variations of axis and vertebral artery were not adequately respected., Conclusion: Transarticular technique of instrumental atlantoaxial fusion is an effective method with multiple application in treatment of craniocervical and upper cervical spine instability. The gain of immediate stability with acceptable risk of possible complications is the major advantage of this procedure. The results of our multicentric retrospective study confirm the expected high fusion rate and are comparable to previously published reports.
- Published
- 2004
32. [Injuries of the atlas].
- Author
-
Stulík J and Krbec M
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cervical Atlas diagnostic imaging, Cervical Atlas surgery, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Radiography, Spinal Fractures diagnostic imaging, Cervical Atlas injuries, Spinal Fractures surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: Injuries of atlas account for 1-2% of all injures of the spine and for 7% of the injuries of the cervical spine. Fractures of atlas occur either as isolated fractures or in combination with the injury of the axis or occipital condyles. The aim of the work is to evaluate a group of patients with the injury of the atlas treated both conservatively and surgically., Material: Between January 1996 and October 2001 we treated at the Orthopaedic Department of 3rd Medical Faculty, Carles University in Prague 10 patients with the injury of atlas. Between November 2001 and December 2002 we treated at the Orthopaedic Department and Spondylosurgical Department of the Medical Faculty Motol another 5 patients with the injury of atlas. In 10 cases the fracture of atlas was isolated (anterior arch--once, 4 time Jefferson fracture, twice--fracture of massa lateralis), in 5 cases the fracture was associated with the injury of epistropheus (dens type II/posterior arch--twice, dens type II/Jefferson fracture--once, dens type II/massa lateralis--once, hangman fracture type II/posterior atlas arch--once). Teh group of patients included 9 men and 6 women of the average age of 46.6 years (range, 27-85 years). Eight patients were treated conservatively, 7 patients surgically. The most frequent cause of the injury was fall on the head or a severe downward violence in 7 cases, car accident in 4 cases, other causes vere identified in 4 cases. Neurological deficit upon admission was found out only in one patient (Frankel D)., Methods: In isolated injuries of the anterior or posterior arch of atlas we always proceeded conservatively. The cervical spine was fixed for 12 weeks in the Philadelphia collar. One isolated fracture of massa lateralis was also treated conservatively for 12 weeks in the Philadelphia collar. Another case of the same type of fracture was treated surgically by C1-C2 by the Magerl technique supplemented on the intact side by the Gallie wire loop. Two stable Jefferson fractures were treated by the halo vest applied for 12 weeks. Two unstable fractures were handled surgically, once by C1-C2 by the Magerl technique and once by C0-C2 occipitocervical fixation. C1-C2 associated injuries were treated in four cases surgically, three times by a direct dens fixation and once by C1-C2 fixation after Magerl supplemented with the Gallie wire loop. A patient with the associated hangman fracture type II and fracture of the posterior atlas arch refused the surgery and therefore was treated by the halo fixation for 12 weeks. Philadelphia collar was applied to the patients operated on., Results: In the group of the conservatively treated, 3 patients complained of pain in the upper part of cervical spine and head requiring from time to time the administration of analgesics. All fractures healed within 12 weeks and the functional radiographs showed stable C0-C2 segments. As for complications, during the conservative treatment in one case a pyogenic secretion was recorded around the fixation elements of the halo apparatus requiring its removal after 8 weeks. The patient was further treated by a pelot fixation. In one case it was necessary to adjust twice the halo apparatus due to re-dislocation of the hangman fracture (associated hangman fracture of type II and posterior atlas arch). In spite of this the injury healed in C2-C3 subluxation, however, the fracture of atlas healed in a favourable anatomical position. In the group of the operated on, 2 patients complained of pain in the upper cervical spine requiring from time to time the administration of analgesics and one patient complained of a marked limitation of the range of motion by 50% (C0-C2 occipitocervical fixation). Also in this group stable C0-C2 segments were found out 12-14 weeks after the surgery., Discussion: In our group of 15 patients the fracture healed, i.e. stable C0-C1 and C1-C2 segments, in all patients treated both conservatively and surgically. In the group of conservatively treated patients there occurred in one case re-dislocation of the fracture. However, the patient refused the surgery repeatedly. Apart from these case we found in neither group any severe complication. The ratio of conservative and surgical treatment was 8:7., Conclusion: Based on our own experience and the literary data we believe that suitable for the treatment of stable injuries of the atlas is conservative treatment, i.e. fixation in the Philadelphia collar for 12 weeks. In unstable injuries or intraarticular injures with dislocation we prefer surgical fixation of C1-C2 or C0-C2 in dependence on the type of injury. All associated injuries are indicated for surgical treatment.
- Published
- 2003
33. [Injuries of the lower cervical vertebrae--the monocortical stabilization technique].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Krbec M, and Vyskocil T
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Child, Female, Fracture Fixation instrumentation, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Postoperative Complications, Cervical Vertebrae injuries, Cervical Vertebrae surgery, Fracture Fixation methods, Internal Fixators, Spinal Fractures surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: In contrast to the thoracolumbal spine, the cervical spine bears a lower biomechanical load and, therefore, anterior stabilization of a fracture is a definitive procedure in the majority of cases. What remains the matter of choice is screw fixation in the body of the vertebra involved. This may be either monocortical or bicortical. In this study, we evaluate a group of patients in whom fractures of the lower cervical spine were treated using the CSLP monocortical system (Synthes)., Material: We included 68 patients in whom complete radiographic data were available and the surgery was performed more than 6 months earlier. This group comprised 49 men and 19 women with the mean age of 37.6 years and range of 12 to 79 years. In the first stage, all patients were operated on from the anterior approach. In 11 (16.2%) patients with type B or C injury, according to the AO classification, the procedure was completed by dorsal stabilization. The definite indication for surgery was any involvement of nerve structures or open fractures; kyphosis greater than 15 degrees, reduction by more that 50% of the proximal edge of the vertebral body, narrowing of the spinal canal by more than 50%, multiple wedge fractures and disc and ligament injuries associated with instability were considered conditional indications., Methods: Any locked dislocation was reduced manually under X-ray guidance in the shortest possible time. Subluxations or fractures of the vertebral body were reduced by positioning the patient's body on the operating table. The standard procedure for subluxation management was distraction of the segment by applying a Caspar's distractor and subsequent microscopic discectomy up to the posterior longitudinal ligament. A tricortical bone graft was collected from the iliac crest. After its implantation, the distractor was released and the segment was fixed by a CSLP system (Synthes) with monocortical screws 14 mm long, usually used in a 2 + 2 configuration. In locked dislocation, in addition, the discission of the posterior longitudinal ligament and inspection of the dural sac were performed, and completed by dorsal stabilization with hook plates or a Cervifix fixator (Synthes) in one procedure under anesthesia. When the body of the vertebra was fractured, either partial or subtotal excision of it was carried out according to the type of fracture or when displaced fragments protruded into the spinal canal. A tricortical graft taken from the iliac crest was larger than in the treatment of subluxation but a plate was applied as in monosegmental fixation. In addition, the graft was fixed with special screws that had a porous surface and holes in the shank. Dorsal stabilization with hook plates or a Cervifix fixator was used for severe instability in type B or C injury., Results: The normal range of cervical spine motion (flexion, extension, inclination, rotation) was found in 44 patients. Slightly limited movement (75% to 90% normal motion) was in 17 patients and seven were affected more seriously (50% to 75% normal motion). Of the 19 patients with neurological deficit, 13 showed improvement by 1, 2 or 3 grades of Frankel's classification in seven, four and two patients, respectively. The first signs of bone remodeling between the graft and covering plate, usually at the distal graft border, were found in 16 patients at 6 weeks and in the remaining 52 patients at 12 weeks. By 6 months postoperatively, all patients showed complete healing and incorporation of the tricortical graft. The cranial screws broke in one case (1.5%) but this had no effect on the treatment outcome. No complication related to the surgical procedure occurred intraoperatively., Discussion: The very good results achieved with the use of the CSLP monocortical system in this study (98.5% fusion without broken screws or plates) are in agreement with relevant data reported in the Czech and foreign literature. The principal condition is a careful preparation of both the endplates of vertebral bodies and the graft. After insertion, this should stay in place without any tendency to extrude. If the graft is too long, it imposes an increased load on plates or screws that consequently act ventrally., Conclusion: Our experience and literature data suggest that the CSLP monocortical system is fully capable to stabilize the lower cervical spine after injury, supposing all procedures described above are completed. In more serious trauma and type B or C instability, the additional dorsal instrumented fusion is indicated.
- Published
- 2003
34. [Atlanto-axial rotation dislocation (case report)].
- Author
-
Stulík J and Krbec M
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Joint Dislocations diagnosis, Middle Aged, Atlanto-Axial Joint injuries, Joint Dislocations surgery
- Abstract
The authors present a female patient 45 years old, who had a car accident as a driver of a passenger car. Her car was hit from the left side by another car and the women hurt her head, neck and left shoulder. Due to pain in the region of the head and neck she was taken to the respective surgical out-patient department where they diagnosed the concussion of the brain of II degree and distortion of the cervical spine. The patient was treated conservatively by bed rest with the cervical spine fixed in the soft Schanz collar. After ten days she was discharged from the hospital and further followed up by a neurologist in the out-patient department. She underwent physical therapy focussed on the relaxation of muscles in the region of the cervical spine. Due to persisting pain in the region of upper cervical spine the patient was sent to the department of the first author six weeks after the injury. On clinical examination the head was inclined to the right and rotated to the left with pain in the region of the occipitocervical passage. Radiographs were made in the lateral and Sandberg projection. In the lateral projection the atlantodental distance was normal, the Sandberg projection showed an evidently asymmetrical location of the dens between the lateral masses of the atlas, asymmetrical size of the lateral masses and inclination of the head to the left. These basic projections alone showed an evident rotational atlantoaxial dislocation of I degree according to Fielding. The authors further added CT examination which showed rotation of C1 against C2 and asymmetrical location of the dens without dislocation from the anterior arch of the atlas. A conservative physical therapy was not successful and the patient felt worse. Twelve months after the injury a pre-operative traction by Glisson sling was introduced for five days with a gradual weight bearing up to 5 kg. A reduction followed from the dorsal approach and fixation of C1-C2 after Magerl combined with Gallie technique. The surgery was without complications and the post-operative radiographs showed a good position of the C1-C2 complex and a correct insertion of screws through atlantoaxial joints. The patient wore for six weeks a Philadelphia collar and another six weeks the Schanz collar. Standard and functional radiographs in flexion and extension made 12 weeks after the surgery showed bone bridging between C1-C2 arches and a stable atlantoaxial fusion. At the check one year after the surgery the patient had a limited rotation of the head by 25%, however, she was without pain and the inclination and rotation of the head was compensated. In the authors' view the use of Magerl technique of C1-C2 fixation is possible in case of a rotational atlantoaxial dislocation but difficult with regard to the changed anatomical conditions.
- Published
- 2002
35. [Combined method of treating dislocated fractures of the calcaneus].
- Author
-
Stehlík J and Stulík J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Calcaneus pathology, Female, Fracture Fixation, Internal methods, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Calcaneus injuries, Fractures, Bone surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: The treatment of dislocated intraarticular fractures of calcaneus is still an unsolved chapter of traumatology. Our own poor long-term results of a purely conservative procedure has led us to develop a combined method of a direct and indirect reduction of calcaneus with the subsequent stabilization which we have been using since 1994. The basic principle of the method consists in the combination of a direct reduction of dislocated fragments of articular surfaces and indirect of calcaneus as a whole with the subsequent transfixation of calcaneus by K-wires., Material: In the period of 1994-2001 we have treated in total 261 patients with 302 fractures of calcaneus, of which 218 were men (83.5%) and 43 women (16.5%) in the age range from 13 to 82 years (average age 45.1 years). By our own surgical method we treated 213 patients with 248 fractures, of which 180 were men (84.5%) and 33 women (15.5%) in the age range of 13-79 years (average age 44.8 years). Conservatively handled were 54 fracture in 48 patients. In the long-term followed up group we included 160 patients with 187 fractures operated on by identical method observing a minimum two-year interval after the operation. Of them 134 were men (83.8%) and 26 women (16.2%) in the age range of 15-75 years (average age 44.3 years). Of 248 operated on fractures of calcaneus 159 were joint-depression type (64.1%), 61 tongue type (24.6%) and 28 comminuted (11.3%) types of fractures. The time interval between the injury and operation ranged between 6 hours and 3 weeks (average 18.5 hours), however most patients we operated on on the day of injury., Methods: The basic principle of the method was a combination of a direct reduction of dislocated fragments of articular surfaces and indirect reduction of the calcaneus as a whole with a subsequent transfixation of the calcaneus by K-wires. After draping and setting of the image intensifier we proceeded to the actual surgery and divided the whole procedure of reduction and subsequent stabilization into 4 phases: Phase I--traction Phase II--elevation Phase III--compression Phase IV--transfixation In the first traction phase we inserted K-wire transversely through the distal-posterior edge of the calcaneus and connected it to the U-handle in order to achieve a proper effect of the traction. By traction distally along the long axis of the limb we restored the height and length of the calcaneus. Simultaneous pendular movements in eversion/inversion direction released the fragments and considerably facilitated the subsequent reduction. In the second, elevation phase the procedure differed according to individual types of fracture. In joint-depression type we inserted a blunt Steinmann pin or better a curved transpedicular elevator under the dislocated posterior articular surface through skin plantar stab incision and an ever-present primary transverse line of the fracture. In the tongue type of fracture we first introduced in the second phase a thick K-wire (3 mm) along the long axis of the tongue fragment and reduce the fragment by leverage elevation with a simultaneous continuous U-handle traction. After obtaining the desirable position we fixed the fragment by a K-wire vertically introduced from the upper part of calcaneal tuberosity (anteriorly and laterally from the origin of the Achilles tendon) towards the planta. If the medial part of the posterior articular surface remained dislocated we finished its reduction by means of elevator as in the preceding type of the fracture. The third and fourth phases of the surgical procedure was again identical for both types of fractures. In the third, compression phase we performed manually lateral compression of fragments under permanent traction. In the fourth, transfixation phase we first transfixed the reduced position of fragments formed by the primary longitudinal and transverse line. Under continuous radiograph checking in the lateral projection we inserted K-wires gradually from the lateral aspect, about 1.5 cm beneath the lateral malleolus into sustentacular fragment. Additional, mostly 2 K-wires we inserted under continuous traction and counter-traction along the long axis of the calcaneus and as the last step we drilled K-wires from the plantar side from calcaneal tuberosity into the fragments of the posterior articular surface., Results: In the group of long-term followed up patients we evaluated the Creighton-Nebraska Health Foundation score in 160 patients who were on average 43.4 months after operation. The obtained values of the score ranged between 63-100 points with the average of 83.9 points. In 27 patients the result was very good (16.9%), in 89 patients good (55.6%), in 24 patients fair (15.0%) and in 20 patients the result was poor (12.5%)., Discussion: The first results of our method of 1998 have proved that it is necessary to combine the basic procedures of direct reduction of joint fragments, i.e. restoration of the calcaneus as a whole, namely in a strictly recommended sequence with a subsequent transfixation by K-wires. We do not use surgical procedures with open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) differing mutually by the chosen surgical approach and the type of internal fixation used. As compared to ORIF our method has a significantly broader indication range. It can be used for the operation of patients regardless of the age, presence of associated diseases (diabetes, vascular affection) or local affection (a marked oedema, haematoma, non-infected skin blisters). The comparison of the general outcomes of the treatment in our group of patients, 72.5% of excellent and good results and only 12.5 of poor results, corresponds with the values of equally extensive foreign group of patients. In addition, as concerns the number of the incidence of deep infects in closed fractures (0.8%) the values in our group are in comparison several times lower and amputation of the limb was not necessary in any of the cases. It should be also noted that our group of patients has only a minimal indication limitation and operated on are also risk patients who never get in "filtered" groups treated by open method. Therefore it may be stated that the general results are in case of our method markedly better., Conclusion: The proposed method requires neither a specialist nor any expensive technical equipment and as a result it may be used both at orthopaedic and surgical departments and due to its undemanding nature and short hospitalization it is also very acceptable from the economic viewpoint.
- Published
- 2002
36. [Use of bioceramics in the treatment of fractures of the thoraco-lumbar spine].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Krbec M, and Vyskocil T
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Female, Fracture Fixation, Internal methods, Humans, Lumbar Vertebrae injuries, Male, Middle Aged, Thoracic Vertebrae injuries, Bone Substitutes therapeutic use, Ceramics therapeutic use, Lumbar Vertebrae surgery, Spinal Fractures surgery, Thoracic Vertebrae surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: The primary reduction and stabilization of all types of injury to the thoracolumbar spine is currently performed from the posterior approach by an internal, transpedicular fixator. The exceptions are type A fractures, according to the AO classification, that can primarily be treated from the anterior approach. The aim of the study was to assess the effect of BAS-O bioceramic granules, inserted by transpedicular approach, on the development of post-operative kyphosis of the segments injured., Material: Between 1997 and 2001 we treated anterior spinal column fractures, using bioceramic granules in combination with an internal fixator, in 53 patients (40 men, 13 women: age 26 to 69 years; average, 42.3 years) at the Department of Orthopedics and Traumatology of the Third Faculty of Medicine and FNKV in Prague. However, only 42 patients (33 men, 9 women; age 28 to 67 years; average, 41.6 years) who had had the metal fixator removed more than six months previously were included in the study. The fixator was removed in the range of 10 to 24 months after the primary operation. The sample was divided into two groups; one with bioceramic material inserted in the body of the damaged vertebra (20 patients) and the other bioceramic granules implanted in both the vertebral body and the intervertebral space (22 patients)., Methods: In all the patients, the standard procedure included transpedicular application of Schanz's screws and an USS FS fixator (Synthes). If necessary, distraction of the segment injured and the correction of lordosis were carried out. Further transpedicular procedures to treat the anterior spinal column were as follows: If the vertebral body was injured without destruction to the intervertebral disc, a bent elevator was inserted through the vertebral foramen and the intervertebral joints were reduced. At the same time, a cavity for application of bioceramic granules was created. These were inserted, using a funnel and a pusher, in the anterior part of the injured body. If the fracture involved a destroyed intervertebral disc, the disc was removed, the vertebral end plate of the adjacent vertebra was perforated and bioceramic granules were inserted in both the vertebral body and intervertebral space. Subsequently, spongeous bone grafts were harvested from the ilium and massively applied to the previously decorticated transverse and articular processes., Results: In the group of patients who had bioceramic granules inserted in only the vertebral body, the kyphotic angle was on average 10.36 degrees after injury and 2.86 degrees after surgery; therefore, a correction by 13.22 degrees was achieved. At 3 and 6 months after surgery, the kyphotic angle was 2.71 degrees and 2.68 degrees, respectively; at 3 and 6 months after fixator removal, it was 0.67 degree in both instances. In the group of patients with bioceramic granules implanted in both the vertebral body and intervertebral space, the kyphotic angle was on average 9.16 degrees after injury and 4.26 degrees after, surgery; therefore, a correction by 13.43 degrees was achieved. At 3 and 6 months after surgery, the kyphotic angle was -4.11 degrees and -4.00 degrees, respectively; at 3 and 6 months after fixator removal, it was 2.38 degrees and 2.44 degrees, respectively., Discussion: Our results revealed differences between the patients who had bioceramic granules inserted in only the vertebral body and those who had them also in the intervertebral space. At 6 months after surgery, the first group showed the loss of correction per two segments to be 3.53 degrees on the average, whereas the second group had a loss of 6.70 degrees, i.e., twice as high. This may be explained by a more serious damage to the intervertebral disc in the latter group. Only small differences between the groups were found in the kyphotic angle at both 6 months after surgery and 3 to 6 months after fixator removal. This implied that, in both groups, the loss of correction occurred in the period up to 3 months after removal of the fixator., Conclusions: Bioceramic granules provide material for replacement of osseous tissue in the body of the vertebra as well as conditions necessary for bone restructuring. The loss of correction per segment is lower by about half in patients treated with bioceramic granules than in those who received a spongeous bone grafts.
- Published
- 2002
37. [Marginal indications for the Magerl method of fixation of C1-C2 (case report)].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Krbec M, and Havránek P
- Subjects
- Cervical Vertebrae injuries, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Internal Fixators, Multiple Trauma, Cervical Vertebrae surgery, Orthopedic Fixation Devices
- Abstract
The authors present a 4-year old girl who had a car accident as a passenger and hurt her head, chest and limbs as well as upper cervical spine. The patient with multiple injuries was taken to the FTN Centre of Children's traumatology, Prague. Here the basic vital functions were ensured and a diagnosis was made of contusion of the brain with quadriparesis and inhibition of the respiratory centre, contusion of the chest, epiphysiolysis of the distal femur and later also instability of C1-C2. A censor for measuring or intracranial pressure was immediately inserted with a subsequent reduction of the distal femur and elastic fixation. External lumbar drainage was performed in the next week instability of C1-C2 was not found out and therefore not treated. Three months after the injury a ventriculoperitoneal shunt for intracranial hypertension was inserted. MRI showed stenosis in the region of occipitocervical passage and dorsal decompression of craniocervical passage was performed which consisted in the removal of the posterior arch of C1 and a significant extension of foramen magnun dorsally and laterally to both sides. Due to persisting ligamentous instability of C1-C2 with a spastic quadriparesis and inhibition of the respiratory centre a surgical atlantoaxial stabilization was indicated, i.e. causal treatment of instability. Seven months after the injury Magerl fixation of C1-C2 was performed by 2.7 mm titanicum screws (Synthes). Preoperative stability of C1-C2 in the reduced position was satisfactory but with regard to iatrogenic instability the C0-C1 fixation was combined with occipitocervical fussion by Ransford loop extending over C0-C3. Further, the triangular flap of periost was overturned from the external occipital protuberance to C3 and all this was bridged by cortical cancellous bone grafts from iliac crest. After two months a check simple and functional x-ray examination showed a stable fusion of C0-C2. The neurological finding remained the same even after one year, i.e. a severe quadriparesis with the inhibition of the respiratory centre requiring artificial lung ventilation.
- Published
- 2002
38. [Primary osteosynthesis of the odontoid process: a multicenter study].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Suchomel P, Lukás R, Chrobok J, Klézl Z, Taller S, and Krbec M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Odontoid Process injuries, Fracture Fixation, Internal, Odontoid Process surgery, Spinal Fractures surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: Direct osteosynthesis is a method of choice for the treatment of odontoid process fractures. It is based on insertion, from the anterior approach, of one or two screws from the C2 body into the apex of the odontoid across the fracture line. The tensile action of screws results in compression of fragments and stabilization of the fracture. The aim of the study was to evaluate a group of patients treated by this method and to compare our results with those reported in the foreign literature., Material: A total of 99 patients were treated by direct osteosynthesis of the odontoid in the departments involved in the study between 1994 and 2001., Methods: Patients indicated for this surgery were those with fractures of type II according to Anderson and D'Alonzo and those with type III fractures but only when the fracture line went across the articulation surfaces of C1-C2, when closed reduction was not possible or the patients were not indicated for halo fixation. Direct osteosynthesis was not applied to fractures with comminution at the base of the odontoid, irreducible fractures, odontoid fractures combined with dislocated fractures of the atlas or pathological fractures. Severe kyphosis of the cervical spine or a large thoracic cage was also regarded as a contraindication., Results: All the 99 patients were followed up from 3 up to 102 months, with an average of 28.5 months; only in seven patients, the follow-up period was shorter than 6 months. The most frequent subjective complaint was a painful operation wound. This usually resolved within two weeks of surgery. Except for four patients, alle were satisfied with the outcome. Type II fractures were diagnosed in 84 and type III fractures in 15 cases. A total of 174 screws were inserted into the odontoid processes of 99 patients. A single screw was used in 25 and two screws in 73 patients. In one case, three screws had to be inserted. Screw lenght ranged from 36 to 44 mm, diameter was 40.9 mm. Three months after surgery, X-ray examination, both in flexion and extension, did not reveal any instability in any of the patients. No morphological change in the C2-C3 intervertebral space was observed Of 92 (92.9%) paitents under longterm follow-up, 84 (91.3%) showed complete healing of the fracture, three died and five patients eventually developed pseudoarthrosis, which was due to a broken screw in three of them. This condition was treated by dorsal fixation of C1-C2 according to Magerl or by one of the dorsal cerclage techniques. The group was free of any perioperative complications related to the anterior approach or injury to nerve structures by screws., Discussion: The most frequent subjective complaint was a painful operation wound. Treatment of odontoid fractures varies according to the type of injury, bone quality and also practice at each department. Type II injuries are highly unstable and, because of the small fracture surface, their healing ability is much lower than in type III fractures. Previously, most of the patients with odontoid injuries were treated conservatively by immobilization in a plaster cast or a brace or, later, by a halo device. In the long term, however, they showed a high proportion of pseudoarthroses (10 to 100%). Direct osteosynthesis of the odontoid by screws permits the maintenance of rotation of the C1-C2 mobile segment. We followed the scheme of indications used abroad but did not perform osteosynthesis to correct pseudoarthrosis. The number of osteosyntheses healed (91.3%) was also in agreement with the literature data. Earlier, we used two screws for all types of fractures. Recently, we have preferred insertion of a single screw in type II and III fractures in narrow odontoids. In the later, there is no danger of rotational dislocation during screw insertion; to insert one screw from the centre of the C2 base is easy and speeds up the procedure. However, in displaced type II and type II T fractures, two screws are a necessity. Similarly to other authors, we recorded a slight limitation of cervical spine rotation in patients at long-term follow-up, particularly in elderly subjects with advanced osteochondrosis. No complications leading to deterioration of the patient's state were recorded., Conclusions: Direct osteosynthesis is a method of choice for most of the type II and indicated cases of type III fractures of the odontoid process of the axis. This surgical procedure facilitates restoration of anatomical conditions of the spine and its immediate stability. Consequently, patients can be readily mobilized and rehabilitated.
- Published
- 2002
39. [Replacement of the vertebral body with an expansion implant (Synex)].
- Author
-
Krbec M, Stulík J, and Tichý V
- Subjects
- Bone Transplantation, Humans, Osseointegration, Prosthesis Implantation, Lumbar Vertebrae surgery, Prostheses and Implants, Thoracic Vertebrae surgery
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: This paper describes replacement of the vertebral body with the expansion implant Synex. Usually, autologous bone graft is used to replace the vertebral body. In patients with bone cancer or multiple injuries to the spine, cement filling is preferred whereas, in other indicated cases, implants are inserted, of which Harms' titanium cage has been the most common one. However, this needs filling with a large amount of bone tissue and it is often difficult to adjust its size into the space available. Telescopic devices, on the other hand, are easier to implant and their application requires only a minimum amount of autologous bone tissue., Material: In the period from January 2000 to June 2001, we used telescopic implants Synex to replace vertebral bodies in 34 patients. Indications for treatment were: vertebral fractures in 14, post-traumatic kyphosis in six, vertebral metastatic tumours in eight and a primary tumour in six patients., Methods: In 25 cases, the vertebral body replacement was completed by posterior stabilization using internal fixation and, in nine cases, by anterior stabilization with a Ventrofix fixator. In 32 patients, the implant was inserted from the anterior approach and, in two, from the posterior approach following complete spondylectomy., Results: The L1 vertebra was replaced most frequently (nine patients), then T 12 (seven patients) and L2 (six patients). For treatment of fresh fractures, the Synex implant was used in 14 cases. Of these one was inserted from the posterior approach in the L1 region where trauma had caused severe injury to the spinal cord. In spinal tumours. Synex was used in 14 patients, i.e., in six with diagnosed plasmacytoma, in two with metastatic dissemination from prostate carcinoma, in four with vertebral metastases from breast cancer and in two patients with non-differentiated metastases. The anterior approach was performed by conventional thoracotomy or combined thoracotomy and lumbotomy in 20 patients and a less invasive retroperitoneal approach was used in 12 patients. One patient died of multiple metastases at 7 months after surgery and one patient had relapse of a local tumour resulting in paraparesis that required a repeat decompression of the spinal canal. The operation took 1 h and 50 min when the anterior approach and anterior stabilization with a Ventrofix fixator were used; the operation lasted from 3 h 20 min to 6 h 10 min when complementary posterior stabilization was involved. The patients were followed up for 2 to 24 months. No failure of the implant in terms of migration, change in position or penetration into adjacent vertebral bodies occurred., Discussion: The replacement of a vertebral body has conventionally been performed with the use of a massive bone graft. However, collection of an autologous bone graft large enough to suit this purpose is not always possible. Complications at the donor site have been described. A homologous bone graft carries a risk of disease transmission and the reconstruction ability of a massive graft has not been confirmed for certain. Cement filling augmented with Kirschner's wires is usually used in cancer patients. Titanium cages require application of a large amount of spongiose bone tissue into their interior. Consequently, bone in the centre fails to remodel. A sharp edge of the mesh may induce migration of the cage towards the vertebral body and failure of the implant. Mechanical failure and collapse of cages have also been described. Telescopic cylindrical implants, on the other hand, need only a small amount of spongiose bone tissue to fill. They can be adapted directly to the implantation site by means of a special distractor and, therefore, before adjusting its final length, the exact position and orientation of the implant can be achieved in the space prepared. This facilitates close contact with the endplates of adjacent vertebral bodies and the development of osteointegration. The use of telescopic implants enabled us to avoid the force that is often necessary to apply during insertion of Harms' cages in the patients whose spines had already been stabilized with posterior fixation or to avoid the need of a triple surgical procedure in order to achieve better stability of the implant. In two patients, Synex was inserted from a non-standard posterior approach. Indications for Synex implantation should be evaluated in view of disease prognosis in each patient. If only limited survival is expected, cement filling with K-wires should be preferred., Conclusions: Synex is a sophisticated implant to replace severely damaged vertebral bodies regardless of the nature of lesion. Its application required additional stabilization by either posterior or anterior fixation (internal transpedicular fixator and Ventrofix or Kaneda, respectively). Its use is indicated in post-traumatic defects of vertebrae in acute or poorly healed scervical.
- Published
- 2002
40. [Treatment of thoracolumbar spinal fractures using internal fixators (evaluation of 120 cases)].
- Author
-
Krbec M and Stulík J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Lumbar Vertebrae surgery, Male, Middle Aged, Spinal Fractures complications, Thoracic Vertebrae surgery, Internal Fixators, Lumbar Vertebrae injuries, Spinal Fractures surgery, Thoracic Vertebrae injuries
- Abstract
Purpose of the Study: A group of 120 patients was evaluated with acute injury of Th-L spine who were operated on from posterior approach with the use of Dick AO fixator or USS fixator in the period of 1991-1996., Material: In the period of 1991-1996, 128 patients were operated on with the acute injury of Th-L spine. Evaluated were 120 patients: 81 men (67.5%) of average age 40.1 years (age range, 16-74 years) and 39 women (32.5%) of average age 35.4 years (age range, 15-66 years). Posterior stabilization using the internal fixator was combined with posterolateral or posterior interarticular fusion. In comminuted fractures of the vertebral body transpedicular cancellous bone grafting was performed and starting for 1995 also intercorporal transpedicular fusion., Methods: The evaluation covered location and type of fractures, injury of other levels of the spine, other associated injuries, neurological symptomatology prior to the surgery and 3 months after the surgery, duration of surgery and of image intensifier exposure, peroperative and early postoperative complications, radiograph evaluation of the degree of reduction, the loss of correction after 12 months and after the hardware removal., Results: Evaluated were 120 patients. Average interval after the surgery at the time of the evaluation was 43.7 months (range, 24-93 months). The injury was caused in 82 cases (68.3%) by a fall from height, in 26 cases (21.7%) by a car accident and in 12 cases (10%) by another cause. Associated injuries included: calcaneus fracture 18 times, the fracture of ankle 4 times, pelvis fracture 4 times, other fractures 18 times. In 89 cases the injury involved only one vertebra, i.e. one level, 31 cases were multi-level injuries. The angle of the kyphosis of vertebral body was on average 21.8 degrees. Patients with neurological symptoms were on average operated on 2-12 hours after the admission, other patients were operated on in the interval between 5 hours and 7 days. Bilateral transpedicular cancellous bone grafting was performed in 106 affected vertebrae, the canal was revised in 27 injured vertebrae. The surgery took on average 172 minutes (range, 62-430 minutes). Image intensifier exposure lasted on average 2.4 minutes. Average blood loss was peroperatively estimated at 725 ml, postoperatively on average at 815 ml. Postoperative complications: healing of the wound per secundam 6 times, thromboembolic complication in 9 cases--never fatal, pneumonia 3 times, uroinfection 5 times. The total number of these complications was about 8%. Vertebral body was completely restored in 72 cases, incompletely in 34 cases (up to 5 degrees deficit). The correction of kyphosis achieved was on average 6.5 degrees. After 12 months the correction loss with the fixator in place was on average 2.5 degrees. After the removal of the fixator the average correction loss was 5.5 degrees. In 2 cases there occurred a significant re-dislocation which required revision surgery. Transpedicular screws broke 6 times in the total of 4 patients, fixator loosened in 2 cases., Discussion: Surgical treatment of thoracolumbar spine is indicated in unstable injuries and all injuries with neurological lesion and a proved compression of spinal canal. Decompression of the spinal canal is often achieved by reduction, lordotization and distraction. In other cases revision of the canal is indicated. Stabilization is performed by means of a transpedicular internal fixator. Part of the surgery is posterior fusion. The defect in the reduced body is treated by transpedicular cancellous bone grafting. The affected inervertebral disc must be treated by intersomatic fusion. Anterior operation is indicated as a complementary one., Conclusions: 1. Absolute majority of injuries of thoracolumbar spine may be treated from the posterior approach. In this it is necessary to restore the stability of the anterior column. An indispensable part of the operation is a flawless posterior fusion. 2. Some types of injuries require a complementary anterior approach in the first or second step. This applies mainly to the injuries with a defect of anterior column evaluated on the basis of classification after Gaines. 3. A primary isolated anterior approach to the treatment of the injury of Th-L spine is not in our view suitable as a routine.
- Published
- 2001
41. [Tension cerclage using scews--a forgotten technique?].
- Author
-
Bartonícek J, Jehlicka D, and Stulík J
- Subjects
- Acetabulum surgery, Humans, Acetabulum injuries, Bone Screws, Bone Wires, Fracture Fixation, Internal methods, Fractures, Bone surgery
- Abstract
Authors deal with the screw-wire technique described by Brunner and B. G. Weber in 1981. The principle of the technique consists in passing a wire loop around the heads of divergently driven screws. After tightening the screws the wire loop is put under tension which results in interfragmental compression. Mostly used for this purpose are 4.5 mm cortical screws but, if need be, any screw from a standard or small set of instruments is applicable. This type of fixation they use mainly for acetabulum fractures, diastasis of symphysis or for the stabilization of knee osteotomies.
- Published
- 2001
42. [Pararectal miniinvazive retroperitoneal approach to the lumbosacral spine.].
- Author
-
Krbec M and Stulík J
- Abstract
The authors describe the technique of the anterior miniinvasive retroperitoneal pararectal approach to the lumbosacral spine. The technique was verified on cadaveric specimens.The miniinvasive operation requires a special set of instruments (a fixed frame), long instruments and a light cable. The advantage of the approach is a small peroperative traumatization and a relatively low labour intensity. The use of the miniinvasive technique requires a good knowledge of the technique of a routine extensive approach. Key words: surgical approaches, spine, lumbosacral spine.
- Published
- 2000
43. [Magerls technique of c1-2 fixation.].
- Author
-
Stulík J and Krbec M
- Abstract
Magerl technique of transarticular fixation of C1-2 by screws is one of the possibilities of the antlantoaxial fusion. For the first time it was published by Magerl and Seemann in 1987 but the first author had been performing it already since 1979. The principle of the method consists in the placement of two screws from the dorsal approach through atlantoaxial joints in the sagittal plane. The main indication for the Magerl's C1-2 fixation is an acute or chronic instability and a painful osteoarthritis of atlantoaxial joints. Contraindicated is this method only in massive destruction of the lateral mass of atlas and in an anomalous course of the vertebral artery. The authors present their own experience with the first 12 patients who they operated on in the period of 1996-1999. In all cases they added dorsal fixation after Gallie (10 patients) or modified after Brooks and Jenkins (2 patients). The group consisted only of patients with a separate atlantoaxial fusion, i. e. not with the transarticular fixation by screws as part of the set of instruments for occipitocervical fusion. Final check of all patients was performed at the interval of 9-48 months after the operation, on average 19 months. The final outcome was evaluated subjectively according to the patients and also objectively. Subjectively, the patients complained at the beginning of the pain in the region of the wound after the bone graft harvesting which was as a rule greater than the pain in the region of the cervical spine. The pain subsided in 6 weeks, at the latest. All patients but for one (malum suboccipitale Rusti) were satisfied, i. e. they would undergo the operation again. Objectively all 24 screws were inserted correctly thrugh the antlantoaxial joint. Two screws were driven asymmetrically, one of the obliquely medially and the other obliquely laterally without a clinical impact. One screw was evaluated by authors as extending too anteriorly, also without a clinical impact. After 12-14 weeks the functional radiographs showed a good fusion of the C1 -2 segment in 11 (91,7 %) out of 12 patients. Neither an injury of the nerve structures nor of the vertebral artery was recorded within peroperative complications. Loosening or breakage of screws or elements of the dorsal fixation were not recorded, either. The results of the work prove that the Magerls technique of atlantoaxial fusion is effective and in the hands of a specialist also a safe method which provides multiple opportunities for the treatment of C1-2 instabilities. Key words: atlantoaxial instability, fusion, Magerls C1-2 fixation.
- Published
- 2000
44. [Topography of prevertebral structures in thoracic and lumbar spine.].
- Author
-
Doubková A, Krbec M, Stulík J, and Stenhová H
- Abstract
Authors describe the topographic relation of the anterior aspect of thoracolumbar spine to individual prevertebral structures (vessels, nerves, ligaments) as their injury may cause serious complications during spine surgery. Observations have been made on cadavers and checked by peroperative findings and findings on MRI sections. Having a good view of prevertebral anatomical structures has a principal significance for the use of anterior surgical approaches. Key words: topographic anatomy, thoracolumbar spine, MRI.
- Published
- 1999
45. [Os Odontoideum - Post-traumatic Instability of C1-2.].
- Author
-
Stulík J and Krbec M
- Abstract
The case report presents a patient (male, 21 years old) who had a car accident and sustained an injury of upper cervical spine. X-ray examinations showed instability of C1-2 segment with a simultaneous os odontoideum. Subsequently CT and MRI examinations were performed to specify the anatomical relations. The patient had only a neurological lesion revealed by the examination by motor evoked potentials (MEP). The metric measurements on standard and functional radiographs showed a minimal sagittal dimension (Dmin) of 13 mm, the distance between os odontoideum and C1 arch (Datl) was 24 mm, the instability index after Penning was 20 mm, the distance between os odontoideum and proc. spinosus C2 in extension (Dext) after Shirasaki et al. was 30 mm, the sagittal rotational angle was 25 degrees and the instability index after Watanabe et al. 56.7 %. CT examination showed an exact shape of os odontoideum but was of minor significance for this anomaly. MRI did not prove simptoms of myelopathy. The final finding was os odontoideum of conical type after the Matsui et al. classification. Based on these examinations and the marked instability of C1-2 segment found a fusion of C1-2 after Magerl was performed in combination with Gallie technique dorsally. Key words: os odontoideum, instability, myelopathy.
- Published
- 1999
46. [Our method of treatment of dislocated fractures of the heel bone (preliminary report)].
- Author
-
Stehlík J and Stulík J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Calcaneus diagnostic imaging, Calcaneus pathology, Female, Fractures, Bone diagnostic imaging, Fractures, Bone pathology, Humans, Male, Radiography, Calcaneus injuries, Fractures, Bone surgery
- Abstract
The authors present first experience with their method of treatment of displaced fractures of calcaneus. The method is based on the combination of direct and indirect reposition of fragments and exact fixation with K-wires. Axial and AP X-ray and 2 plane CT scan are indispensible conditions for operation planning. The procedure can be divided into 4 phases: traction, elevation, compression, transfixation. Up till now 65 patients have been treated with this method. 20 patients with 24 fractures were evaluated according to the Creighton-Nebraska Health Foundation score in the interval 24 months after the operation. The average value of the score was 96.6 points, 16 patients were evaluated as excellent, in 2 patients the result was good.
- Published
- 1998
47. [Extension injury of th-L spine (case history).].
- Author
-
Krbec M and Stulík J
- Abstract
Out of 160 injuries of Th-L spine operated on only two were of extension type. In the first case it was a pure posterior displacement of L 1-2into extension with the angle of lordotization 20 degrees and complete paraplegia. From the viewpoint of classification this injury may be included in group B 3.3 according to AO/ASIF classification. With regard to an extreme post-injury displacement which at first glance is similar to the "seatbelt fracture" after Denis classification we would suggest to call this injury "reverse seat-belt fracture". The treatment consisted in the reduction and monosegmental instrumentation. The neurological deficit is permanent. The second case was a fracture of extension type in a patient with ankylosing spondylitis (morbus Bechterev). The patient was treated by monosegmental instrumentation. The initial incomplete neurological deficit improved in the course of several weeks (Frankel D). With regard to the fact that the fracture line was passing anteriorly through the vertebral body, this injury cannot be clasified according to AO/ASIF classification. Extension injuries are rare injuries and with regard to their low frequency of incidence the classification schemes more or less neglect them. Key words: Th-L spine, injuries, extension injury, classification.
- Published
- 1998
48. ["Pincer" fractures of the thoracolumbar spine.].
- Author
-
Krbec M and Stulík J
- Abstract
Based on a retrospective review of 101 injuries of the thoracolumbar spine operated at the Orthopaedic and Traumatological Clinic of the Third Medical Faculty, Charles University in 1991-1995 the authors followed up a group so-called pincer fractures. A typical feature of these fractures is a comminuted zone of the median portion of the vertebral body, dislocation of the anterior fragment of the vertebral body in a forward direction and filling of the gap which thus arises with material from the torn intervertebral disc. "Pincer" fractures tend to develop into pseudoarthroses. In the investigated group 14 fractures of this type were found (14 %). All injuries were treated from a posterior approach by internal AO fixation or USS fixation resp. in two patients in the second stage an anterior approach was used and the vertebral body was substituted. Based on analysis of the initial morphology of the fractures and the peroperative reponibility of the dislocated fragment of the anterior part of the vertebral body the injuries were classified into three groups and indication criteria for surgery were established. Groups with a non-dislocated or reponible anterior fragment can be treated from the back only by instrumentation, posterior fusion and transpedicular spongioplasty with transpedicular intercorporal desis, the group with an irreponible anterior fragment must be treated by posterior instrumentation and fusion and subsequently from an anterior approach by substitution of the vertebral body and anterior fusion. Key words: thoracolumbar spine, fractures, classification, pincer.
- Published
- 1997
49. [Modulatory effect of glucans on the function of murine macrophages, NK-cells and lymphocytes].
- Author
-
Macela A, Lesná J, Kovárová H, Stulík J, Sandula J, Masler L, and Ferencík M
- Subjects
- Animals, Cytotoxicity, Immunologic drug effects, Killer Cells, Natural drug effects, Killer Cells, Natural immunology, Lymphocyte Activation drug effects, Lymphocytes drug effects, Macrophages drug effects, Mice, Mice, Inbred Strains, Adjuvants, Immunologic, Glucans pharmacology, Lymphocytes immunology, Macrophages immunology
- Abstract
The particulate glucan (G1), soluble glucan preparations (G2 to G5, and G7) isolated from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and glucomanan prepared from culture fluid after cultivation of Candida utilis (G6) were tested for their immunomodulatory activity in vivo and in vitro. In tests in vivo three soluble glucans (G3, G4, and G7) injected s.c. to mice in the dose of 10 mg/kg increased the cytotoxic activity of peritoneal macrophages. The influence of glucans on natural killer cells was without significance. The lymphoproliferative reaction of spleen cells to polyclonal mitogens was inhibited by all the preparations used with the exception of soluble glucan G2. The mitogenic effect of the preparations, co-stimulatory tests and direct cytotoxicity to cells of cell lines used in cytotoxicity assays were assessed in vitro. The transformation index of glucans in the study was increased according to the glucan and dose tested. Inhibition of the lymphoproliferative reaction measured by the co-stimulatory test for optimal concentration of Concanavalin A occurred in a wide range of doses for the preparations G1 to G6. The preparation G7 increased the incorporation of 3HTdR under the same conditions. The use of a suboptimal concentration of Concanavalin A revealed co-stimulatory activity of all the preparations tested. Assessment of the cytotoxic activity of peritoneal macrophages and of the activity of natural killer cells induced in vitro was complicated by the direct cytotoxicity of particulate glucan and soluble glucan G5 (carboxymethylglucan) for target cells (YAC 1, and YAC 1 and K 562 resp.).
- Published
- 1991
50. [Leukotrienes and lipoxins].
- Author
-
Stulík J, Macela A, and Kovárová H
- Subjects
- Humans, Hydroxyeicosatetraenoic Acids metabolism, Hydroxyeicosatetraenoic Acids pharmacology, Leukotrienes metabolism, Leukotrienes pharmacology, Lipoxins
- Published
- 1989
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.