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Radiographic benefit of incorporating the inflection between the cervical and thoracic curves in fusion constructs for surgical cervical deformity patients.

Authors :
Bortz, Cole
Passias, Peter
Pierce, Katherine
Alas, Haddy
Brown, Avery
Naessig, Sara
Ahmad, Waleed
Lafage, Renaud
Ames, Christopher
Diebo, Bassel
Line, Breton
Klineberg, Eric
Burton, Douglas
Eastlack, Robert
Kim, Han
Sciubba, Daniel
Soroceanu, Alex
Bess, Shay
Shaffrey, Christopher
Schwab, Frank
Source :
Journal of Craniovertebral Junction & Spine. Apr-Jun2020, Vol. 11 Issue 2, p131-138. 8p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Purpose: The aim is to assess the relationship between cervicothoracic inflection point and baseline disability, as well as the relationship between clinical outcomes and pre- to postoperative changes in inflection point. Methods: Cervical deformity (CD) patients with baseline and 3-month (3M) postoperative radiographic, clinical, and inflection data were grouped by region of inflection point: C6 or above, C6-C7 to C7-T1, T1, or below. Inflection was defined as: Distal-most level where cervical lordosis (CL) changes to thoracic kyphosis (TK). Differences in alignment and patient factors across pre- and postoperative inflection point groups were assessed, as were outcomes by the inclusion of inflection in the CD-corrective fusion construct. Results: A total of 108 patients were included. Preoperative inflection breakdown: C6 or above (42%), C6-C7 to C7-T1 (44%), T1 or below (15%). Surgery was associated with a caudal migration of inflection by 3M: C6 or above (8%), C6-C7 to C7-T1 (58%), T1 or below (33%). For patients with preoperative inflection T1 or below, the inclusion of inflection in the fusion construct was associated with improvements in horizontal gaze (McGregor's Slope included: −11.3° vs. not included: 1.6°, P = 0.038). The inclusion of preoperative inflection in fusion was associated with the superior cervical sagittal vertical axis (cSVA) changes for C6-C7 to C7-T1 patients (−5.2 mm vs. 3.2 mm, P = 0.018). The location of postoperative inflection was associated with variation in 3M alignment: Inflection C6 or above was associated with less Pelvic Tilt (PT), PT and a trend of larger cSVA. Location of inflection or inclusion in fusion was not associated with reoperation or distal junctional kyphosis. Conclusions: Incorporating the inflection point between CL and TK in the fusion construct was associated with superior restoration of cervical alignment and horizontal gaze for surgical CD patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09748237
Volume :
11
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Craniovertebral Junction & Spine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
143741980
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4103/jcvjs.JCVJS_57_20