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Anterior Odontoid Screw Fixation for C2 Fractures: Surgical Nuances, Complications, and Factors Affecting Fracture Union.

Authors :
Tyagi, Gaurav
Patel, Kautilya R.
Singh, Gyani Jail
Uppar, Alok Mohan
Beniwal, Manish
Rao, Kannepalli Venkata Lakkshmana Narsinga
Pruthi, Nupur
Bhat, Dhananjaya
Somanna, Sampath
Chandramouli, Bangalore
Dwarakanath, Srinivas
Source :
World Neurosurgery. Aug2021, Vol. 152, pe279-e288. 10p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Type II odontoid fractures are the commonest C2 fractures. The management of dens fractures remains controversial with various radiological and fracture morphological factors affecting the approach and outcomes. All cases of anterior odontoid screw fixation between 2010 and 2020 were retrospectively analyzed. Patients' clinical, radiological (type of fracture, orientation, displacement, and diastasis), operative (single vs. double screw) and follow-up records were documented. The postoperative imaging findings were classified into grades I (excellent), II (good), and III (poor) based on the anatomical alignment with the screw. Follow-up cervical computed tomography was reviewed for fracture union. A total of 49 patients with a mean age of 37.3 ± 13.8 years were included in the study. The average time from injury to surgery was 23.1 ± 22.2 days. The bicortical screw purchase and superoposterior odontoid tip breach significantly affected the postoperative alignment (P = 0.035 each). Fracture union was noted in 41 (83.7%) patients. The horizontal fracture displacement ≥2.5 mm (P = 0.02) and poor postoperative fracture alignment (P < 0.001) resulted in worse fracture union rates. Transient dysphagia was the commonest complication (n = 12), whereas screw breakout (n = 2) and pullout (n = 2) were other hardware-related complications. One patient underwent re-exploration for screw readjustment and 2 underwent posterior instrumentation. Anterior odontoid screw fixation is technically straightforward, less morbid, and preserves biomechanical cervical mobility, when compared with the posterior instrumentation. With careful patient selection, meticulous surgical planning, and intraoperative image-guided screw insertion, good fracture union outcomes can be obtained. In the current study, we were able to achieve stable fracture union in 83.7% patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18788750
Volume :
152
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
World Neurosurgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151608005
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wneu.2021.05.077